Luigi Ferrarese

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Born12 December 1795 (1795-12-12)
Died8 August 1855(1855-08-08) (aged 59)
Luigi Ferrarese
Born12 December 1795 (1795-12-12)
Died8 August 1855(1855-08-08) (aged 59)
Scientific career
FieldsMedicine
Phrenology

Luigi Ferrarese (12 December 1795 – 8 August 1855)[1] was an Italian medical doctor and the leading proponent of phrenology in Italy in the nineteenth century.[2]

He was born at Brienza, in the province of Potenza, to Nicola and Antonia Contardi. He received his first education in a Piarist school in Naples, studying Italian literature, Greek and Latin. After he graduated in medicine (1817), Ferrarese began to work at the Maddalena lunatic asylum (Aversa) with the noted pioneer of psychiatry Biagio Miraglia,[3] and gave private lessons.

He was a member of several institutions such as the Scientific Academies of Naples, Turin, Bologna, Padua and a corresponding member of the Phrenological Society of Paris. In 1848, he was elected as a deputy for the district of Potenza at the Neapolitan Parliament but, because of his liberal ideas, was constantly monitored by the Bourbon police.

Ferrarese died in 1855, stricken with typhoid fever.

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