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CESARE LOMBROSO (1836-1909)

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Originally appearing in Volume V16, Page 936 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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CESARE

LOMBROSO (1836-1909)  ,
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Italian criminologist, was born on the 18th of November 1836 at Verona, of a Jewish
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family . He studied at Padua, Vienna and Paris, and was in 1862 appointed professor of psychiatry at Pavia, then director of the lunatic asylum at Pesaro, and later professor of forensic
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medicine and of psychiatry at
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Turin, where he eventually filled the chair of criminal anthropology . His
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works, several of which have been translated into
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English, include L' Uomo delinquente (1889); L'Uomo di genio (1888) Genio e follia (1877) and La Donna delinquente (1893) . In 1872 he had made the notable
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discovery that the disorder known as pellagra was due (but see PELLAGRA) to a
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poison contained in diseased maize, eaten by the peasants, and he returned to this subject in La Pellagra in Italia (1885) and other works . Lombroso, like Giovanni Bovio (b . 1841), Enrico Ferri (b . 1856) and Colajanni, well-known Italian criminologists, and his sons-in-law G . Ferrero and Carrara, was strongly influenced by Auguste Comte, and owed to him an exaggerated tendency to refer all
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mental facts to biological causes . In spite of this, however, and a serious want of accuracy and discrimination in handling evidence, his
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work made an epoch in
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criminology; for he surpassed all his predecessors by the wide scope and systematic character of his researches, and by the
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practical conclusions he drew from them . Their
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net theoretical results is that the criminal population exhibits a higher percentage of
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physical,
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nervous and mental anomalies than non-criminals; and that these anomalies are due partly to degeneration, partly to atavism . The criminal is a
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special type of the human
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race,
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standing midway between the lunatic and the savage . This
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doctrine of a " criminal type "has been gravely criticized, but is admitted by all to contain a substratum of truth .

The practical reform to which it points is a

classification of offenders, so that the born criminal may receive a different kind of punishment from the offender who is tempted into crime by circumstances (see also CRIMINOLOGY) . Lombroso's biological principles are much less successful in his work on Genius, which he explains as a morbid, degenerative condition, presenting analogies to insanity, and not altogether alien to crime . In 1899 he published in French a
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book which gives a resume of much of his earlier work, entitled Le Crime, causes et remedes . Later works are: Delitti vecchi e delitti nuovi (Turin, 1902); Nuovi studi sul genio (2 vols., Palermo, 1902) ; and in 1908 a work on
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spiritualism (Eng. trans., After Death—What ? 1909), to which subject he had turned his attention during the later years of his
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life . He died suddenly from a heart complaint at Turin on the 19th of
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October 1909 . See Kurella, Cesare Lombroso and die Naturgeschichte
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des Verbrechers (
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Hamburg, r892); and a biography, with an analysis of his works, and a short account of their general conclusions by his daughters, Paola Carrara and Gina Ferrero, written in 1906 on the occasion of the
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sixth congress of criminal anthropology at Turin .

End of Article: CESARE LOMBROSO (1836-1909)
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