BIBLIOGRAPHY OF THE CHIEF WORKS OF CESARE LOMBROSO

Archivio di Psichiatria, antropologia criminale e scienze affini (Archives of Psychiatry, Criminal Anthropology and Kindred Sciences). Thirty-two volumes. Published by Fratelli Bocca, Turin and Lausanne.

L'Uomo Delinquente (Criminal Man). Fifth Edition. Vols. I, II and III of xxxv + 650, 576, and 677 pages respectively, with separate volume of plates, maps, etc. Bocca, Turin, 1906, 1907.

Translations:

L'Hommea criminel. Vols. I and II published 1895, Vol. III (Le crime, ses causes et remèdes) 1907, by F. Alcan, Paris.

Die Ursachen und Bekâmpfung des Verbrechens. Bermuheler Verlag, Berlin, 1902.

El Delito, sus causas y remedios. Librería de Victoriano Suárez, Madrid, 1902.

La Donna Delinquente, la prostituta e la donna normale. (With Guglielmo Ferrero.) New Edition. Bocca, Turin, 1903.

Translations:

Das Weib als Verbrecherin und Prostitute. Verlagsanstalt und Druckerei, Hamburg, 1894.

The Female Offender. Fisher Unwin, London, 1895.

Il Delitto Politico e le Rivoluzioni. (With R. Laschi.) Bocca, Turin, 1890.

Translations:

Das politische Verbrechen und die Revolutionen. Two vols. 1890.

Le Crime politique. Two vols. Félix Alcan, Paris, 1890.

Le piu recenti scoperte ed applicazioni della psichiatria ed antropologia criminale. Bocca, Turin, 1893.

Translations:

Neue Fortschritte in den Verbrecherstudien. Wilhelm Friedrich, Leipzig. 1894.

Neue Fortschritte der kriminellen Anthropologie. Marhold, Halle, 1908.

Neue Verbrecherstudien. Marhold, Halle, 1908.

Nouvelles recherches de Psychiatrie et d'Anthropologie criminelle. Alcan, Paris, 1890.

Gli anarchici. Bocca, Turin, 1894.

Translations:

Die Anarchisten. Verlagsanstalt und Druckerei, Hamburg, 1895.

Les Anarchistes. E. Flammarion, Paris, 1896.

La Perizia psichiatrico-legale. Bocca, Turin, 1905.

Lezioni di Medicina legale. Bocca, Turin, 1900.

Troppo Presto: Appunti al nuovo codice penale. Bocca, Turin, 1888.

Palimsesti del carcere. Bocca, Turin, 1888.

Translations:

Kerker Palimpsesten. Hamburg, 1899.

Les Palimpsestes des prisons. Stock, Lyon.

La Delinquenza e la rivoluzione francese. Treves, Milan, 1897.

Criminal Anthropology. (Twentieth Century Practice of Medicine, Vol. XII, pp. 372-433.) New York, 1897.

Luccheni e l'antropologia criminale. Bocca, Turin, 1899.

Il caso Olivo. (With A. G. Bianchi.) Libreria Editrice Internazionale, Milan, 1905.

Ricerche sui fenomeni ipnotici e spiritici. Unione Tip. Edit. Turin, 1909.

L'Uomo di genio. Sixth Edition. Bocca, Turin, 1894.

Translations:

L'Homme de génie. Alcan, Paris, 1889.

The Man of Genius. Walter Scott, London, 1891.

Genio e degenerazione. Second Edition. Remo Sandron, Palermo, 1908.

Translations:

Entartung und Genie. Wiegand, Leipzig, 1894.

Nuovi studi sul genio. Two vols. Sandron, Palermo, 1902.

Translations:

Neue Studien über Genialität (Schmidt's Jahrbücher der gesammten Medizin, 1907).

Pazzi e anormali. Lapi, Citta di Castello, 1890.

In Calabria. Niccolo Giannotta, Catania, Sicily, 1898.

L'Antisemitismo e le scienze moderne. Roux, Turin, 1894.

Translations:

Der Antisemitismus und die Juden. Wiegand's Verlag, Leipzig, 1894.

L'Antisémitisme. Giard et Brière, Paris, 1899.

Problèmes du jour. Flammarion, Paris, 1906.

Il momento attuale in Italia. Casa Editrice Nazionale, Milan, 1905.

Grafologia. Ulrich Hoepli, Milan, 1895.

Translations:

Graphologie. Reclam, Leipzig.

Trattato profilattico e clinico della pellagra. Bocca, Turin, 1890.

Translations:

Die Lehre von der Pellagra. Oscar Coblenz, Berlin, 1898.


INDEX

A
Affection for animals, [62], [63]
Affections, of born criminals, [27]
in children, [133]
examination of, [222-225]
Age and crime, [102], [151], [152]
Akkas, tribe of Central Africa, [15]
Alcoholism, and hallucinations, [30], [82-84]
chronic, [81], [142-143]
physical characteristics, [81], [82]
psychic disturbances caused by, [82-84]
results of, [83]
apathy and impulsiveness of victims, [84], [85]
crimes peculiarly due to, [85], [142]
course of the disease, [86]
hereditary, [138]
important factor in criminality, [138], [141]
temporary, [141-142]
and epilepsy, [142]
effect on handwriting, [229]
Algometer, [25], [246]
Anfossi's tachyanthropometer, [237]
craniograph, [239]
Angelucci (Actes du Congrès d' Anthropologie), case of epileptic moral insanity, [69]
Anomalies, of criminals, [7], [10-24], [231-235]
of morally insane, [53]
Anthropology, criminal, defined, [5]
most important discovery of, [137]
practical application of, [262-279]
Aphasia, simulation of, [272] ff., [275]
Arson, [121]
Arts and industries of criminals, [44], [135]
Assaulters, [25]
Asylums for criminal insane, [205-208]
Asymmetry, [13], [53], [242], [261]
Atavism, [18], [135], [136]
Atavistic origin of the criminal, [8], [9], [19], [48], [135]
Australia, probation system in, [189], [191]
Austria, percentage of illegitimates among criminals, [144]
percentage of women among criminals, [151]
Auto-illusion, [108], [109]
Aymaras, the, an Indian tribe of South America, [6]
Azara, d' (Travels in America, 1835), [126]
Azeglio, Massimo d' (Reminiscences), [148]
B
Bain, [130]
Ballvé, Señor, director of Penitenciario Nacional of Buenos Ayres, [201]
Bank of Rome case, [106], [107]
Barnardo, Dr., work for orphans and destitute children of London, [158-160]
Beccaria, Cesare, founder of Classical School of Penal Jurisprudence, [3], [4]
Bedlam, [207]
Belgian Government, agricultural colony founded at Meseplas by, [202]

Belgium, probation system in, [191]
Bernard, experiments with dogs, [60]
Blasio, de, explanation of hieroglyphics of the Camorristi, [43], [44]
Booth, General, [156], [157]
Born criminals, [3-51]
percentage of, among criminals, [8], [100]
physical characteristics, [10-24], [231-255]
sensory and functional peculiarities, [24-27]
affections and passions, [27], [28]
moral characteristics, [28-40]
intelligence, [41]
relation to moral insanity and epilepsy, [58-73], [87], [259]
professional characteristics, [71]
difference between epileptics and, [72]
no criminal scale among, [152]
institutions for, [205] ff.
Bosco and Rice (Les Homicides aux Etats-Unis), on crime in Massachusetts, [173]
Brigands, [35], [113-115], [215]
Broadmoor, [207], [208]
Brockway, [192]
Büchner, on instincts in bees and ants, [142]
Burglars, [25]
Burton (First Footsteps in East Africa), [128]
C
Cabred, Professor, [203], [204]
Camorra, [44], [48], [117], [230]
Camorristi, hieroglyphics of, [43], [44]
dress, 230
Canada, homes for destitute children, [160]
Capital punishment, [208], [209]
Carrara, Francesco, [4]
Carrara, Prof. Mario, on neglected children, [130]
Cephalic index, [10], [241]
Children, destructive tendency, [65]
instincts, [130] ff.
affection, [133]
effect of environment on, [144]
institutions for destitute, [156] ff.
methods of dealing with, [176] ff.
susceptibility to suggestion, [226]
Children's courts. See [Juvenile courts]
Cinædus, [231], [244]
Classical School of Penal Jurisprudence, [4], [9]
Classification of criminals, [8]
Colour-blindness, [26], [249]
Confession of criminaloids, [105]
Connon, Richard, [53]
Coprophagia, [274], [275]
Corporal punishment, [191]
Cretins, physical characteristics, [227], [234], [236], [260]
dress, [231]
Crime, origin of the word, [125]
among primitive races, [125] ff.
in civilised communities, [134]
atavistic origin, [135], [136], [137]
ætiology of, [136]
pathological origin, [137]
organic factors, [137]
percentage of, among Jews, [140]
social causes, [143]
prevention, [153] ff.
curability, [153], [156]
Criminal, the, defined, [3]
Criminal type, [24], [48]
Criminaloids, [100-121]
percentage of, among criminals, [8]
physical characteristics, [102], [251]
psychological distinctions between born criminals and, [102] ff.
cases of, [103], [104]
reluctance to commit crimes, [105]
easily induced to confess, [105]
moral sense and intelligence, [106]
natural affections and sentiments, [106]
social position and culture, [107] ff.
clever swindlers, [108]
development into habitual criminals, [111-113]
and certain crimes, [121]
punishment, [186]
Cruelty, [39]
Cynicism, [31]
D
Dalton (Descriptive Ethnology of Bengal), [129]
Danish prisons, [195]

"Darwin's tubercle," [15], [235]
Dejerine, [138]
Delirium, [98]
Dementia, [76], [227], [259], [260]
simulations of, [272] ff.
Despine's method of punishment, [195], [196]
Destitute children, care of, [156]
institutions for, [156] ff.
Dewson, Miss Mary, [189]
Disease and its relation to crime, [8], [220]
Don Bosco, the Black Pope, [157], [173]
Drunkenness, temporary, [141]. See also [Alcoholism]
Du Bois-Reymond's apparatus, [25], [246]
Dundrum, Ireland, [207]
Dynamometer, [252], [253]
E
Economic conditions, relation to crime, [150]
Education, and moral insanity, [143]
and crime, [143], [149]
in Elmira Reformatory, [193]
"Educational Alliance," for Jewish emigrants, [172]
Egypt, theft in, [128]
Elmira Reformatory, [192-194]
England, crime in, [173]
juvenile court in, [176]
probation system in, [189], [191]
asylums for criminal insane, [207]
Environment, [8], [144], [145]
Epilepsy, ancient application of the term, [58]
characteristic phenomena, [58]
mild forms, [59], [60]
multiformity, [59], [60], [87]
psychological characteristics, [61]
effect on character, [62]
relation to crime, [69], [71]
motory and criminal, [71]
psychic, [88]
ambulatory, [89], [90]
alcoholic psychic, [142]
Epileptics, brain cells of, [22]
relation to born criminals and morally insane [58] ff., [87]
physical anomalies common to criminals and, [60], [61], [234]
psychological characteristics, [61] ff.
cases, [64-65]
criminal, [66-69], [70], [259]
difference between born criminals and, [72]
non-criminal, [89-92]
obsessions, [226]
dress, [230]
special offences, [259], [260]
Epileptoids, [101]
Erotomania, [96]
Esthesiometer, [245]
Examination of criminals, [219-257]
antecedents and psychic individuality, [220-222]
intelligence, [222]
affections, [222-225]
morbid phenomena, [225-226]
speech, [226-228]
memory, [228]
handwriting, [228-230]
dress, [230-231]
physical, [231-245]
sensibility, [245-251]
movements, [251-255]
functions, [255]
table of, [255-257]
F
Fines, [187], [191]
Fisherton House, [207]
Forgers, [46], [140], [245]
France, percentage of illegitimates or orphans among minors arrested, [144]
system for minor offences, [187]
probation system in, [191]
Frank, Francis, [223]
French Panama Scandal, [106], [107]
G
Gambling, [40]
Games, [40]
Garofalo, Senator, his table of penalties, [210]
George, Henry, [164]
George Junior Republic, [160], [164-167]
Germans, ancient, theft among, [128], [129]
Gilmour (Among the Mongols), [130]
Gipsies, [140]
Goitre, [220], [244]
H
Habitual criminals, [44], [110-115], [198]
Hallucinations, [30], [82-84]
Hamburg, percentage of illegitimates among prostitutes, [144]
Handwriting, [228-230]
Harwick, quoted, on sense of right and wrong, [33]
Hebrew Sheltering Guardian Society in New York City, [160-164]
Heredity, indirect, [137]
direct, [57], [137-139]
influence of, [144], [220], [235]
Hieroglyphics, [43], [44]
Homicide, among criminaloids, [121]
in Italy, [140]
relation of temperature to, [145]
in Massachusetts, [173]
and melancholia, [259]
Hydrosphygmograph, [223]
Hypnotism, [101]
Hysteria, [92-99]
relation to epilepsy, [92]
physical and functional characteristics, [93]
psychology, [94]
susceptibility to suggestion, [95], [226]
and delirium, [98]
sensibility to metals, [248], [261]
special offences of, [259]
simulation of, [261]
I
Idiots, impulses, [74], [258]
speech, [227]
physical characteristics, [235], [260]
Idleness, [40], [150]
Illegitimates, percentage of, among criminals, [144]
Imbeciles, [75], [259], [260], [269]
Imitation, [146]
Immigration and its relation to crime, [147], [148]
Imprisonment, [154], [186], [187]
Impulsiveness, [36], [85]
Incendiaries, [26]
Indemnity, [191]
India, infanticide in, [126]
theft in, [129]
Industrial Homes of the Salvation Army, [168]
Inebriates, crimes peculiar to, [85-86]
hallucinations of, [226]
Infanticide, [121], [126], [127]
Insane, the morally, relation to born criminals, [53], [57], [58]
cases, [53] ff.
relation to epileptics, [61], [65] ff.
professional characteristics, [71]
institutions for, [206]
dress, [230]
special offences, [259], [260]
Insane criminals, [74-99], [234]
characteristics distinguishing them from habitual criminals, [77], [78]
antecedents, [78]
motives, [78]
typical cases, [79]
institutions for, [205] ff.
two classes, [208]
Insanity, moral, [56], [65-69], [272] ff.
criminal, [74-99]
genuine and simulation of, [260], [276]. See also [Lunacy]
Institutions, for destitute children, [156]
for destitute adults, [167]
for women criminals, [180]
for minor offenders, [185]
for habitual criminals, [198]
for born criminals and the morally insane, [205]. See also [Reformatories], [Penitentiaries]
Intellectual manifestations of born criminals, [42-44]
Intelligence, of born criminals, [41]
of criminaloids, [106]
examination, [222]
Invulnerability of criminals, [64]
Italy, hot-beds of crime in, [140]
percentage of illegitimates among criminals, [144]
percentage of women among criminals, [151]
institutions for orphans, [157]
J
Jackson, on epileptic fits, [60]

Jews, percentage of crime among, [140]
Jukes family, the, [138], [139]
Juridical criminals, [115-117]
Juvenile courts, [176], [178], [179]
Juvenile offenders, [139]
methods of dealing with, [176] ff., [192]
K
Kleptomania, [141]
Kowalewsky (Archivio di Psichiatria, 1885), [63]
Krafft-Ebing, [84]
quoted, on somnambulism and epileptics, [63]
L
Labour, in reformatories, [166], [199]
enforced, profitable to the State, [202], [203], [213]
Lacassagne, [47]
Ladelci (Il Vino, 1868), [37]
Landolt's apparatus for testing the field of vision, [249]
Lewisohn, Mr., [161]
Lombroso, Cesare, discovery of median occipital fossa, [6]
new theory as to criminals, [52], [56], [57]

view of hysteria and epilepsy, [99]
on percentage of criminals of inebriate families, [138]
on criminal associations, [146]
Criminal Man, [9], [288-291]
Modern Forms of Crime, [9]
Recent Research in Criminal Anthropology, [9], [309]
Prison Palimpsests, [9], [155], [300-302]
The Female Offender, [180], [291-294]
Crimes, Ancient and Modern, [173], [302-303]
The Man of Genius, [283-288]
Political Crime, [294-298]
Too Soon, [298-300]
Diagnostic Methods of Legal Psychiatry, [303-305]
Anarchists, [305-307]
Lectures on Legal Medicine, [307-308]
Luciani, experiments of, [59]
Lunacy, general forms, [74], See also [Insanity]
M
Maccabruni, Dr. (Notes on Hidden Forms of Epilepsy, 1886), [89]
Mafia, [117], [230]
Magnaud, [187]
Maniacs, [76], [259]
Manzoni (Promessi Sposi), on instinctive tendency to law-breaking, [152]
Marey's tympanum, [224]
Marro (Annalidi Freniatia, 1890), [64]
Massachusetts, crime in, [173]
probation office in Boston, [189]
reformatories at Boston, [190]
Mattoids, [228], [229]
Median occipital fossa, discovery of, [6]
Melancholia, [75], [227], [252], [259]
Memory, [228]
Mendacity, [96-98]
Meseplas, agricultural colony at, [202], [203]
Metchnikoff, [14]
Meteoric sensibility, [26]
Modern School of Penal Jurisprudence, [4], [5], [9], [153], [155], [156]
Monomaniacs, impulses and motives, [77]
cases, [78], [276] ff.
handwriting, [228], [230]
dress, [231]
examination of, [276] ff.
Moral sense, of criminals, [28-40]
of criminaloids, [106]
Moreau, [130]
(De l' Homicide chez les enfants, 1882), [131]
Morel, [53], [98]
Mülhausen (Diary of a Journey from the Mississippi to the Pacific), [129]
Murder, among gipsies, [140]
among Jews, [140]
in United States, [145]
Murderers, physical characteristics, [16], [18], [26], [46], [236]
moral sense, [29], [38]
imprisonment, [182]
dress, [230]
N
Newspaper reports of crimes, influence of, [146], [147]
Nothnagel's thermo-esthesiometer, [247]
O
Obermayer's methods in prisons, [195], [196]
Obscenity, [63]
Occupations suitable for prisoners, [197], [203], [204]
"Open Door," the, penal institution in Buenos Ayres, [203], [204]
Orange, [208]
Orgies, [40]
Osmometer, [251]
Ottolenghi, discoveries of, [61]
P
Paralysis, [75], [226], [229]
Paralytic, demented, [269]
"Paranza," [48]
Paresis, [82], [83]
Parkinson's disease, [252]
Passion, criminals of, [117-121], [186]
Patrizi, [224]
"Patta, La" [41]
Pears (Prisons and Reform, 1872), [196]
Pederasts, [232]
Pellagra, [76], [150]
Pelvimeter, [239]
Penal codes, [176], [178]
Penal colonies, [201-204]
Penalties, [153]
table of, proposed by the Modern School, [210-212]
Penitenciario Nacional of Buenos Ayres, [198-203]
Penitentiaries, [194-198]
Penta, on percentage of criminals of inebriate families, [138]
Perez,(Psychologie de l'enfant), quoted, on anger in children, [131]
Perth, Scotland, [207]
Peruvian Indians, [6], [7]
Physical anomalies of criminals, [7], [10-24], [231-245]
Pictet, [125]
Pictography, [43]
Pinel, [37], [53]
Plethysmograph, [223], [225], [264]
Poisoners, [31], [182]
Political offenders, [186]
Polyandry, [127]
Population, density of, effect on criminality, [146], [148]
Positive School of Penal Jurisprudence. See [Modern School of Penal Jurisprudence]
Pott, [125]
Poverty and crime, [150]
Precocity in crime, [222]
Preventive methods, [175] ff.
Primitive races, tattooing among, [45]
views of crime, [125-129], [134]
death penalty among, [209]
Prison life, effect upon criminals, [148], [149], [153], [154], [186]
Probation Office in Boston, [189]
Probation system, [178], [179], [188-191]
Professions and crime, [149], [150], [221]
Progeneismus, [13], [60], [243]
Prognathism, [7], [12]
Prostitution, [144], [151], [180]
Proverbial sayings concerning criminals, [49], [50]
Prussia, percentage of illegitimates among criminals, [144]
Psychology of born criminals, [27] ff.
Ptosis, [14], [236]
Punishments, [185]
corporal, [191]
capital, [208], [209]
R
Race and crime, [139], [140]
Recidivists, [46], [222]
Reformatories, [182], [192]
Reformatory Prison for Women at South Framingham, near Boston, [183-185]
Remorse, [29]
Repentance, [29]
Rescue Homes of the Salvation Army, [169]
Revue d'Anthropologie, 1874, [128]
Ribaudo, Brancaleone, [138]

Richet, experiments with dogs, [59], [60]
on hysteria, [95]
Roncoroni, discoveries of, [21], [22], [61], [100]
Rosenbach, experiments of, [59]
"Rota, La" [41]
S
Salvation Army, [167-170]
Samt, on epilepsy, [88], [90], [91]
San Stefano, island, convict population, [34]
Sensibility, general, [24], [245], [246], [277]
to touch and pain, [25], [245], [246], [277]
to the magnet, [26]
meteoric, [26]
of the senses, [26], [249-251]
localisation of, [247]
to metals, [248]
Simulation, [97], [261], [272]
Sisterhoods founded by Rabbi Gottheil, [170-172]
Skin diseases, [232]
Skull, formations, [10-12]
measurements, [239-242]
Slang, [28], [33], [42], [152]
Smugglers, [114]
Snow (Two Years' Cruise round Tierra del Fuego), [129]
Social causes of crime, [143]
Somatic examination, [260], [277]
Somnambulism, [63], [141]
South America, institutions for orphans, [157]
Salvation Army in, [170]
reformatories, [192]
penal institution in Buenos Ayres, [203]
Spain, percentage of women among criminals, [151]
Spencer (Principles of Ethics, 1895), [129]
Strabismus, [14], [236]
Strength, [27], [252]
Suggestion, susceptibility to, [95], [269]
examination of, [226]
case, [269]
Suicide, [119], [259]
Swindlers, characteristics, [16], [18], [20], [25], [46], [231], [245], [246]
percentage among criminaloids, [108]
cases, [109]
imprisonment of, [182]
Sydenham, on hysteria, [95]
Symbiosis, [212-215]
T
Tachyanthropometer, [237]
Tamburini, quoted, [37]
Tardieu (De la Folie, 1870), [85]
Tattooing, [39], [45-48], [232]
Temperature, relation to crime, [145]
Theft, instincts of, [37], [38]
petty, [117]
percentage of, among criminaloids, [121]
among primitive races, [128-130]
and paralysis, [259]
and epileptics, [260]
Thieves, physical characteristics, [20], [46], [150], [236], [243-244]
cases, [28], [29], [37], [38]
moral sense, [32-35]
handwriting, [230]
Tissié (Les alienés voyageurs, 1887), [88]
Tonnini, [62], [64], [65]
Traumatism, [140], [141]
Treachery, [34]
U
United States, institutions for destitute children, [160]
percentage of crime in, [173], [174]
probation system in, [178], [189], [190]
juvenile courts in, [178]
reformatories in, [192]
V
Vanicek, [126], [127]
Vanity, [35]
Vidocq, [35]
Vindictiveness, [38]
Volumetric glove, [224]
Volumetric tank, [223]

W
Weber's esthesiometer, [245]
Where the Shadows Lengthen, [168]
Women, percentage of criminality among, [151], [180]
nature of criminality among, [181], [182]
Work, motive force of every institute, [197]
Wormian bones, [12]
Z
Zakka Khel, criminal tribe in India, [129], [140]
Zehen, experiments of, [59]
Zino, [41]