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GAETANO FILANGIERI (1752—1788)

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Originally appearing in Volume V10, Page 339 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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GAETANO

FILANGIERI (1752—1788)  ,
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Italian publicist, was born at Naples on the 18th of August 1752 . His
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father, Caesar, prince of Arianiello, intended him for a military career, which he commenced at the early age of seven, but soon abandoned for the study of the law . At the bar his knowledge and eloquence early secured his success, while his defence of a royal decree reforming abuses in the administration of justice gained him the favour of the king, Charles, afterwards Charles III. of Spain, and led to several honourable appointments at court . The first two books of his
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great
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work, La Scienza della legislazione, appeared in 1780 . The first
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book contained an exposition of the rules on which legislation in general ought to proceed, while the second was devoted to economic questions . These two books showed him an ardent -reformer, and vehement in denouncing the abuses of his time . He insisted on unlimited
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free trade, and the abolition of the
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medieval institutions which impeded production and
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national well-being . Its success was great and immediate not only in Italy, but throughout
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Europe at large . In 1783 he married, re-signed his appointments at court, and retiring to Cava, devoted himself steadily to the completion of his work . In the same
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year appeared the third book,
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relating entirely to the principles of criminal jurisprudence . The
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suggestion which he made in it as to the need for reform in the
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Roman Catholic church brought upon him the censure of the ecclesiastical authorities, and it was condemned by the congregation of the
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Index in 1784 . In 1785 hepublished three additional volumes, making the
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fourth book of the projected work, and dealing with
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education and morals .

-In 1787 he was appointed a member of the supreme

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treasury council by Ferdinand IV., but his
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health, impaired by close study and over-work in his new office, compelled his withdrawal to the country at Vico Equense . He died somewhat suddenly on the zest of
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July 1788, having just completed the first
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part of the fifth book of his Scienza . He
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left an outline of the remainder of the work, which was to have been completed in six books . La Scienza della legislazione has gone through many
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editions, and has been translated into most of the
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languages of Europe . The best Italian edition is in 5 vols . 8vo . (1807) . The Milan edition (1822) contains the Opusculi scelti and a
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life by Donato Tommasi . A French
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translation appeared in Paris in 7 vols . 8vo (1786–1798); it was republished in 1822–1824, with the addition of the Opuscles and notes by Benjamin Constant . The Science of Legislation was translated into
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English by
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Sir R . Clayton (
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London, 1806) .

End of Article: GAETANO FILANGIERI (1752—1788)
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