Open navigationClose navigation

Home

Shows

This Day in History

U.S. History

All the major chapters in the American story, from Indigenous beginnings to the present day.

  • Colonial America

    Colonial America

  • American Revolution

    American Revolution

  • Early U.S.

    Early U.S.

  • Slavery

    Slavery

  • Civil War

    Civil War

  • Immigration

    Immigration

  • Great Depression

    Great Depression

  • Black History

    Black History

  • Hispanic History

    Hispanic History

  • Women’s History

    Women’s History

  • LGBTQ+ History

    LGBTQ+ History

  • Native American History

    Native American History

  • Asian American, Native Hawaiian & Pacific Islander History

    Asian American, Native Hawaiian & Pacific Islander History

  • U.S. Presidents

    U.S. Presidents

  • First Ladies

    First Ladies

  • U.S. Constitution

    U.S. Constitution

  • U.S. Government and Politics

    U.S. Government and Politics

  • U.S. States

    U.S. States

  • Crime

    Crime

World History

History from countries and communities across the globe, including the world’s major wars.

  • African History

    African History

  • Asian History

    Asian History

  • Cold War

    Cold War

  • European History

    European History

  • Exploration

    Exploration

  • Holocaust

    Holocaust

  • Industrial Revolution

    Industrial Revolution

  • Latin American & Caribbean History

    Latin American & Caribbean History

  • Middle Eastern History

    Middle Eastern History

  • World War I

    World War I

  • World War II

    World War II

  • Vietnam War

    Vietnam War

Eras & Ages

From prehistory, though antiquity and into the 21st century, all of history’s biggest chapters.

  • Prehistory

    Prehistory

  • Ancient Greece

    Ancient Greece

  • Ancient Egypt

    Ancient Egypt

  • Ancient China

    Ancient China

  • Ancient Middle East

    Ancient Middle East

  • Ancient Americas

    Ancient Americas

  • Ancient Rome

    Ancient Rome

  • Middle Ages

    Middle Ages

  • Renaissance

    Renaissance

  • 19th Century

    19th Century

  • 20th Century

    20th Century

  • 21st Century

    21st Century

Culture & Tradition

The stories behind the faiths, food, entertainment and holidays that shape our world.

  • Arts & Entertainment

    Arts & Entertainment

  • Food

    Food

  • Holidays

    Holidays

  • Landmarks

    Landmarks

  • Mysteries & Folklore

    Mysteries & Folklore

  • Religion

    Religion

  • Sports

    Sports

Science & Innovation

The pivotal discoveries, visionary inventors and natural phenomena that impacted history.

  • Inventions & Science

    Inventions & Science

  • Natural Disasters & Environment

    Natural Disasters & Environment

  • Space Exploration

    Space Exploration

  • Archaeology

    Archaeology

HISTORY Honors 250

Stream HISTORY
Stream HISTORY

By: Becky Little

European History

What Type of Criminal Are You? 19th-Century Doctors Claimed to Know by Your Face

The now-debunked 'born criminal' theory was highly influential in criminology circles.

Becky Little

Becky Little

Cesare Lombroso, the "Father of Criminology

Alessandro Albert/Getty Images

Published: August 08, 2019

Last Updated: April 15, 2025

Can you tell who a criminal is just by looking at them? No you can’t, but that didn’t stop the idea from gaining traction in the late 19th century. Early criminologists in the U.S. and Europe seriously debated whether criminals have certain identifying facial features separating them from non-criminals. And even though there is no scientific data to support this false premise of a “born criminal,” it played a role in shaping the field we now know as criminology.

This idea first struck Cesare Lombroso, the so-called “father of criminology,” in the early 1870s. While examining the dead body of Giuseppe Villella, a man who’d gone to prison for theft and arson, the Italian professor made what he considered a great discovery: Villella had an indentation on the back of his skull that Lombroso thought resembled those found on ape skulls.

History's Most Terrifying Serial Killers

Revisit the deadly sprees of some of history's scariest serial killers – including one who was never captured – and catch "American Ripper" Tuesdays at 10/9C.

“At the sight of that skull, I seemed to see all of a sudden…the problem of the nature of the criminal—an atavistic being who reproduces in his person the ferocious instincts of primitive humanity and the inferior animals,” he wrote in his 1876 book Criminal Man (which he expanded in four subsequent editions).

“Thus were explained anatomically the enormous jaws, high cheek bones” and other features “found in criminals, savages and apes,” he continued. These features corresponded, he argued, to a “love of orgies and the irresistible craving for evil for its own sake, the desire not only to extinguish life in the victim, but to mutilate the corpse, tear its flesh, and drink its blood.”

Lombroso’s ideas led to a major shift in how western scholars and authorities viewed crime. Previously, many Enlightenment thinkers believed humans made choices about breaking the law of their own free will. But Lombroso theorized that a good portion of criminals have an innate criminality that is difficult for them to resist. Followers of this new school of thought placed an emphasis on removing “born criminals” from society rather than seeking to reform them. Though the specific premise that physical features correspond to criminality has been debunked, its influence is still felt in modern debates about the role of nature vs. nurture, and even in the surprise after Ted Bundy’s arrest because the handsome law student “didn’t look like” a serial killer.

Cesare Lombroso

_Italian criminologist and physician _Cesare Lombroso.

Bettmann Archive/Getty Images

Cesare Lombroso

_Italian criminologist and physician _Cesare Lombroso.

Bettmann Archive/Getty Images

What Lombroso was doing was combining phrenology and physiognomy, two types of pseudoscience that purported to explain a person’s personality and behavior based on his skull and facial features, respectively. White men before him had used these pseudosciences to advance racist theories, and now Lombroso was using them to develop the field of “criminal anthropology.”

Like his predecessors, Lombroso also relied on racist stereotypes. “Oblique eyelids, a Mongolian characteristic” and “the projection of the lower face and jaws (prognathism) found in negroes” were some of the features he singled out as indicative of criminality. Lombroso also laid out what types of facial features he thought corresponded to specific kinds of crime.

“In general, thieves are notable for their expressive faces and manual dexterity, small wandering eyes that are often oblique in form, thick and close eyebrows, distorted or squashed noses, thin beards and hair, and sloping foreheads,” he wrote in Criminal Man. “Like rapists, they often have jug ears. Rapists, however, nearly always have sparkling eyes, delicate features, and swollen lips and eyelids. Most of them are frail; some are hunchbacked.”

Before publishing Criminal Man, Lombroso had taught psychiatry, nervous pathology and anthropology at the University of Pavia and directed the insane asylum of Pesaro from 1871 to 1873. After the book, he became a professor of forensic medicine at the University of Turin. To law enforcement figures at the time, he was considered an authority.

“He was tremendously influential,” says Diana Bretherick, a retired criminal lawyer with a PhD in criminology. “He was the first person to make crime and criminals a specific area of study, so that’s why he’s called the father of modern criminology." He was also the first person to write about female crime, she explains.

As an expert, Lombroso sometimes provided advice in criminal cases. In a case in which a man sexually assaulted and infected a three-year-old girl, Lombroso bragged that he singled out the perpetrator from among six suspects based on his appearance. “I picked out immediately one among them who had obscene tattooing upon his arm, a sinister physiognomy, irregularities of the field of vision, and also traces of a recent attack of syphilis,” he wrote in his 1899 book, Crime, Its Causes and Remedies. “Later this individual confessed to his crime.”

Translated versions of Lombroso’s books spread his ideas throughout Europe and the U.S. as Social Darwinism—a warped version of Charles Darwin’s theory of evolution—took hold in the late 19th and early 20th centuries. One of the scholars who subscribed to his theories was leading American sociologist Charles A. Ellwood, who became president of the American Sociological Society in 1924.

“The publication of Lombroso's works in English should mark an epoch in the development of criminological science in America,” Ellwood gushed in a 1912 issue of the Journal of Criminal Law and Criminology, where he was an associate editor. Ellwood felt “Lombroso has demonstrated beyond a doubt that crime has biological roots,” and that his books “should be found in the library of every judge of a criminal court, every criminal lawyer and every student of criminology and penology.”

Cesare Lombroso and Criminal Anthropology

De Agostini/Getty Images

Cesare Lombroso and Criminal Anthropology

De Agostini/Getty Images

Lombroso also inspired others to perform studies of criminals in order to determine the “criminal type.” Earnest A. Hooton, an anthropologist at Harvard University, measured more than 17,000 people in the 1930s and concluded that “criminals are inferior to civilians in nearly all of their bodily measurements.” Francis Galton, the racist British anthropologist who coined the term “eugenics,” created composite images of “The Jewish Type” and influenced Nazi thinking, also tried and failed to come up with his own catalogue of criminal features.

Not everyone agreed with these ideas. After Russian novelist Leo Tolstoy met Lombroso, he ridiculed his theories in the 1899 novel Resurrection. And while Alphonse Bertillon—the French policeman who pioneered the mug shot and a system for measuring criminals—thought physical features could disadvantage a person, thus making her more likely to turn to crime, he disagreed that those features were directly linked to criminality.

Still, Lombroso’s ideas about the “criminal type” outlasted him. When casting M, a 1931 movie about a child-killer in Berlin, filmmaker Fritz Lang said “my idea was to cast the murderer aside from what Lombroso has said what a murderer is: big eyebrows, big shoulders, you know, the famous Lombroso picture of a murderer.”

The Cesare Lombroso Museum

Equipment to measure skulls pictured in the Cesare Lombroso Museum in Turin, Italy. The museum of Criminal Anthropology was created by Lombroso in 1876 and opened to the public in 2009.

Alessandro Albert/Getty Images

The Cesare Lombroso Museum

Equipment to measure skulls pictured in the Cesare Lombroso Museum in Turin, Italy. The museum of Criminal Anthropology was created by Lombroso in 1876 and opened to the public in 2009.

Alessandro Albert/Getty Images

Modern facial-recognition technology—which is more likely to mis-identify people of color—has again raised the spectre of Lombroso’s “criminal type.” In 2016, two researchers at China’s Shanghai Jiao Tong University published a paper arguing that they had used facial-recognition technology to pinpoint features that corresponded to criminality. One of the study’s flaws, critics pointed out, was its assumption that the population of people convicted of crimes accurately reflects the population of people who commit them.

Early criminologists couldn’t have predicted modern facial-recognition technology, but even scholars before them could foresee the moral problems it raises. In the 18th-century, the German physicist Georg Christoph Lichtenberg warned about the dangers of taking “physiognomy” seriously: “one will hang children before they have done the deeds that merit the gallows.” One might also overlook Ted Bundy, with his symmetrical features and clean-cut looks, as a potential suspect.

Related Articles

A black and white portrait of a serious-looking man with a strong jawline and intense gaze, set against a textured background.
Asian American, Native Hawaiian & Pacific Islander History

This Japanese Actor Became One of Hollywood’s First Heartthrobs

Sessue Hayakawa was a sex symbol of the silent era.

How Stalin and the Soviet Union Helped Launch the Korean War
Cold War

Why Stalin Supported the Start of the Korean War

Communist North Korea invaded South Korea in 1950 with the approval of Joseph Stalin and the promise of backing from China.

How Coffee Fueled Revolutions—And Revolutionary Ideas
European History

How Coffee Fueled Revolutions—and Revolutionary Ideas

From the Ottoman Empire to the American and French Revolutions, coffeehouses have offered a place for (sober) people to discuss new waves of thought.

The Mariel Boatlift: a Cold War-Era Mass Exodus of Cubans to the U.S.
1980s

The Mariel Boatlift: How Cold War Politics Drove Thousands of Cubans to Florida in 1980

After Fidel Castro loosened emigration policies, some 125,000 Cubans landed on U.S. shores over a span of five months.

See All Articles

About the author

Becky Little
Becky Little

Becky Little is a journalist based in Washington, D.C. Follow her on Bluesky.

Fact Check

We strive for accuracy and fairness. But if you see something that doesn't look right, click here to contact us! HISTORY reviews and updates its content regularly to ensure it is complete and accurate.

Citation Information

Article title
What Type of Criminal Are You? 19th-Century Doctors Claimed to Know by Your Face
Author
Becky Little
Website Name
History
URL
https://www.history.com/articles/born-criminal-theory-criminology
Date Accessed
May 14, 2025
Publisher
A&E Television Networks
Last Updated
April 15, 2025
Original Published Date
August 08, 2019

History Revealed

Sign up for "Inside History"

Get fascinating history stories twice a week that connect the past with today’s world, plus an in-depth exploration every Friday.

By submitting your information, you agree to receive emails from HISTORY and A+E Global Media. You can opt out at any time. You must be 16 years or older and a resident of the United States.

More details: Privacy Policy | Terms of Use | Contact Us

King Tut's gold mask
A+E Global Media
History

HISTORY Education

HISTORY Vault™

HISTORY Apps

HISTORY2™

HISTORY en Español®

Military HISTORY®

Newsletter Sign Up

Share Your Opinions

FAQ / Contact Us

Advertise with Us

A+E Factual Studios™

A+E Studios®

Employment Opportunities

Accessibility Support

TV Parental Guidelines

A&ELifetimeLMNFYIVICE TV
BiographyCrime+InvestigationLRW

Advertise with Us

A+E Factual Studios™

A+E Studios®

Employment Opportunities

Accessibility Support

TV Parental Guidelines

© 2025, A&E Television Networks, LLC. All Rights Reserved.

Terms of Use

Privacy Policy

Copyright Policy

Cookie Notice

Ad Choices

We’ve updated our
Terms of Use

We encourage you to review our updated Terms of Use. By clicking Continue, you agree to our updated Terms of Use.