Born in
Chieti, he was carefully educated by his uncle, Monsignor Celestino Galiani, in
Naples and
Rome with a view to entering the church. Galiani showed early promise as an economist, and even more as a
wit. By the age of twenty-two, after he took orders, he had produced two works by which his name became widely known far beyond the bounds of Naples. The first,
Della Moneta, a disquisition on coinage in which he shows himself a strong supporter of
mercantilism, deals with many aspects of the question of exchange, but always with a special reference to the state of confusion then presented by the monetary system of the Neapolitan government. The other,
Raccolta in Morte del Boia, established his fame as a humorist, and was highly popular in Italian literary circles at the end of the 18th century. In this volume Galiani
parodied, in a series of discourses on the death of the public hangman, the styles of Neapolitan writers of the day. Galiani's political knowledge and social qualities brought him to the attention of
King Charles of Naples and Sicily (afterwards Charles III of Spain) and his liberal minister
Bernardo Tanucci, and in 1759 Galiani was appointed secretary to the Neapolitan embassy in Paris. He held this post for ten years, when he returned to Naples and was made a councillor of the tribunal of commerce, and in 1777 administrator of the royal domains. Galiani's published works focus on the area of humanities as well as social sciences. He left a large number of letters which are not only of biographical interest but are also important for the light they cast on the social, economic, and political characteristics of eighteenth-century Europe. His economic reputation was mainly due to his book written in
French and published 1769 in
Paris, namely, his
Dialogues sur le commerce des bleds, "Dialogues on the commerce in wheat". This work, by its light and pleasing style, and its vivacious wit, delighted
Voltaire, who described it as a cross between
Plato and
Molière. The author, says
Giuseppe Pecchio, treated his arid subject as
Fontenelle did the vortices of
Descartes, or
Algarotti the
Newtonian system of the world. The question at issue was that of the freedom of the corn trade, then much agitated, and, in particular, the policy of the royal edict of 1764, which permitted the exportation of grain so long as the price had not reached a certain level. The general principle he maintains is that the best system in regard to this trade is to have no system — countries in different circumstances requiring, according to him, different modes of treatment. Similarly to Voltaire and even
Pietro Verri, he held that
one country cannot gain without another losing, and in his earlier treatise defended the action of governments in debasing the currency. Until his death in Naples, Galiani kept up a correspondence with his old Parisian friends, notably
Louise d'Épinay; this was published in 1818. See ''L'abate Galiani'', by
Alberto Marghieri (1878), and his correspondence with Tanucci in
Giovan Pietro Vieusseux's ''L'Archivio storico'' (Florence, 1878). ==Published works==