Early life José Paranhos Júnior was born in
Rio de Janeiro in 1845, as son of
José Maria da Silva Paranhos Sr, Viscount of Rio Branco, future
Prime Minister of Brazil and famous statesman and his wife, Teresa de Figueiredo Faria. He began his work in the letters in 1863, in the pages of the
Popular magazine, with a biography of Luís Barroso Pereira, commander of the frigate
Imperatriz. Later, in 1866, in the magazine
L'Illustration, he drew and wrote about the
Paraguayan War, defending the point of view of Brazil. In 1868, he replaced for three months
Joaquim Manuel de Macedo as lecturer of Chorography and History of Brazil, in
Colégio Pedro II.
Diplomacy , naming Rio Branco to the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, in 1902. He began his political career as a prosecutor and later was elected deputy for the Province of Mato Grosso, having served two terms (1868 to 1875). In 1871 he became editor in the newspaper
A Nação, and, from 1891, wrote for
Jornal do Brasil. He became
Consul General in
Liverpool from 1876, was accredited minister in
Germany in 1900, taking over the
Ministry of Foreign Affairs from 3 December 1902 until his death in 1912. He held the position throughout the term of four presidents of the republic - the governments of
Rodrigues Alves,
Afonso Pena,
Nilo Peçanha and
Hermes da Fonseca - forming a national consensus in his time. He received the title of Baron of Rio Branco on the eve of the end of the imperial period, but continued to use the title in his signature even after the
proclamation of the republic in 1889. This was due to being a convinced monarchist and to honor his late father, the senator and diplomat José Maria da Silva Paranhos, Viscount of Rio Branco.
Nobleman In 1889, Emperor
Pedro II of Brazil ennobled him as the
Baron of Rio Branco (
Barão do Rio Branco), a few days before the
proclamation of the republic. Rio Branco continued to use the title throughout his life, despite governmental prohibition, because of his monarchist beliefs . Being a
monarchist, however, was no impediment for his success as a diplomat: the Baron of Rio Branco reached the heights of his career during the Republic, when he acted as Minister of Foreign Affairs for 10 years and settled all of Brazil's remaining border disputes by peaceful means.
Last years Suffering from kidney problems, he offered his resignation, which was refused by President
Hermes da Fonseca. In his last moments of life, he lamented the bombing of the capital of
Bahia,
Salvador, motivated by a political crisis and which occurred on 10 January 1912. His death, during the
carnival of 1912, altered the calendar of the popular feast that year due to official mourning and great tributes in his honor in the city of Rio de Janeiro. He was buried along his father, in the
Caju Cemetery in Rio de Janeiro. Rio Branco is considered the patron of
Brazilian diplomacy. ==Career history and legacy==