One of the most curious applications, and perhaps the most practical, of Criminal Anthropology (of that new science which has associated itself with sociology, psychiatry, and history,) is that which flows from the study of the physiognomy of the political criminal. For not only does it appear to succeed in furnishing us with the juridical basis of political crime,
which hitherto seemed to escape all our researches, so completely that until now
all jurists had ended by saying that there was no political crime; but it seems
also to supply us with a method for distinguishing true revolution, always
fruitful and useful, from utopia, from rebellion, which is always sterile. It is for
me a thoroughly established fact, and one of which I have given the proofs in my
"Delitto Politico," that true revolutionists, that is to say, the initiators of great
scientific and political revolutions, who excite and bring about a true progress in
humanity, are almost always geniuses or saints, and have all a marvelously
harmonious physiognomy; and to verify this it is sufficient simply to look at the
plates in my "Dellito Politico." What noble physiognomies have Apollo, Fabrizi,
Dandolo, Moro, Mazzini, Garibaldi, Bandiera, Pisacane, la Petrowskaia, la
Cidowina, la Sassulich! Generally we see in them a very large forehead, a very
bushy beard, and very large and soft eyes; sometimes we meet with the jaw
much developed, but never hypertropic; sometimes, finally, with
paleness of the face (Mazzini, Brutus, Cassius) but these characteristics seldom
accumulate in the same individual to the extent of constituting what I call the
criminal type.
In a study that I have made with three hundred and twenty-one of our
Italian revolutionists. (against Austria etc.,) nearly all males,. there were
twenty-seven women to one hundred men,) the proportion of the criminal type
was 0.57 per-cent. ; i.e. 2 per cent. less than in normal men. Out of thirty
celebrated Nihilists, eighteen have a very fine physiognomy, twelve present some
isolated anomolies, two only present the criminal type (Rogagiew and Oklasdky),
that is to say 6 -8 per cent. And if from these unfortunate men who represent to
us, even psychologically, the Christian martyrs, we pass to the regicides, to the
presidenticides, such as Fieschi, Guiteau, Nobiling,
and to the monsters of the
French Revolution of 1789, such as Carrier, Jourdan, and Marat, we there at
once find in all, or in nearly all, the criminal type. And the type again frequently
appears among the Communards and the Anarchists. Taking fifty photographs
of Communards I have found the criminal type in I2 per cent. ; and the insane
type in 10 per cent.
Out of forty-one Parisian Anarchists that I
have studied
with Bertillon at the office of the police of Paris, the proportion of the criminal
type was 31 per cent.
In the rebellion of the 1st of May last I was able to study one hundred Turin Anarchists. I found the criminal type among these in the proportion of 34 per cent., while in two hundred and eighty ordinary criminals of the prison at Turin the type was 43 per cent.
Among the 100 individuals arrested on the 1st of May, 30 per cent were recidivists for common crimes; among the others, 50 per cent. Of true prison habitues there were 8 among the former and 20 among, the latter.
Thanks to the assistance of Dr. Carus of The Open Court Publishing
Company, who has sent me many curious data and also the work, of
Schaack, "Anarchy and Anarchists " (Chicago, 1889), which is very
partial, although rich in facts, I have been able to study the photographs of 43
Chicago anarchists, and I have found among them almost the same proportion
of the criminal type, that is 40 per cent. The ones that presented this type are
the two Djeneks, Potoswki, Cloba, Seveski, Stimak, Sugar, Micolanda.
Bodendick. Lieske, Lingg, Oppenheim, Engel and his wife, Fielden, G. Lehm,
Thiele, and Most.
Especially in Potowski, Sugar, and, Micolanda I mark facial
asymmetry, enormous jaws. developed frontal sinus, protruding ears and the
same (except the asymmetry) in Seveski and Novak. Fielden has a turned up
nose and enormous jaws; Most has acrocephaly and facial asymmetry. On the
contrary a very fine physiognomy has Marx, with his very full forehead, bushy
hair and beard, and soft eyes ; and likewise Lassalle, Hermann, Schwab, the two
Spies, Neebe, Schnaubelt, Waller, and Seeger.
In
studying the chief anarchists separately,--the martyrs of the Chicago
anarchists, it might well be said,--there is found in them all an anomaly, very
frequent in normal men as well; that is to say, the ears are without lobes ; the
ears are also developed a little more than normally in all (except in Spies), they
are protruding in Lingg, Fischer, and Engel; the jaw is much developed in Lingg,
Spies, Fischer, and Engel; all have, however, except Spies [Thus according to
the portrait in Schaack's book; but according to information which I later received
from General Trumbull of Chicago, this portrait is not true to life. It would seem,
then, that the features upon which my opinion is based do not exist], the
forehead fine and full, with great intelligence. In the plates of the
journal Der Vorbote we find a Mongolic cast of feature in
Engel and Lingg,
both of whom should have much of the degenerative characters, enormous jaw
and zygoma, and Lingg oblique eyes. But these characters are much less
apparent in the photographs that I received from The Monist and in
which the jaw of Fischer even decreases. Perhaps these photographs were taken
some years before the crime, when they were very young. Certainly in
both instances (in the Vorbote and the photographs from The Monist)
I find a very noble and truly genial physiognomy in Parsons and Neebe. The
physiognomy of August Spies is morbid. He has a senile auricle, voluminous
jaw bones and a strongly developed frontal sinus. And, it is necessary to
remark, the physiognomy corresponds with his autobiography, written with a
fierce fanaticism; whilst in the posthumous writings of Parsons and in the
writings of Neebe we remark a calm and
reflective enthusiasm.
Schwab has the physiognomy of a savant, of a student; he much resembles the nihilist Antonoff, beheaded in Russia (See Plate IV in my "Delitto Politico.") Neebe is quite like an Italian economist well known in America, Luigi Luzzatti.
Fielden has a wild physiognomy, not without sensuality. Parsons resembles Bodio, the great Italian statistician, and in the upper part of the face, Stanley.