BECCARIA, CESARE. (1738-1794). Italian Enlightenment thinker whose groundbreaking treatise On Crimes and Punishments condemned capital punishment and torture; he is considered the father of criminal law and criminal justice. DS. (“Beccaria”). ½p. Tall 4to. Milan, March 3, 1788. In Italian. A report on the “Protocollo dell’intendenza,” a record of state revenue or taxes relative to the province of Milan, from February 10 to the 16, 1788, which Beccaria has examined and certified.
Born into Hapsburg aristocracy, Beccaria studied law and economics at the University of Pavia and, in 1762, published a tract on Milanese currency. Through the informal Milanese literary society “L’Accademia dei pugni” (the Academy of Fists) he became acquainted with such philosophers as Diderot, Montesquieu, Hume, and Helvétius, and began publicly to discuss his interest in penal reform. In 1764, with the encouragement of his friend Pietro Verri, founder of the journal Il Caffè and a fellow member of the Academy of Fists, he published his influential treatise Dei delitti e delle pene (On Crimes and Punishments), one of the first modern arguments against capital punishment and torture and “one of the most influential books in the whole history of criminology,” (Printing and the Mind of Man: A Descriptive Catalogue Illustrating the Impact of Print on the Evolution of Western Civilization During Five Centuries, Carter, et. al.).