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Marco Ezechia Lombroso, known as Cesare, was born in Verona in 1835 and died in Turin in 1909, the city where he founded the Museum of Criminal Anthropology. There, even today, one can admire Lombroso’s private collection consisting of 684 skulls, 27 human skeletal remains, 183 brains (not exposed to the public), 502 bodies of criminals that used to commit more or less bloody crimes, 42 restraint rods, 100 death masks, 475 drawings of “Insane”, thousands of photographs of criminals, madmen, and prostitutes, brigands’ clothes and 3 “carnivorous” plant models.