The enlightenment in
Lombardy took its first steps at the Accademia dei Trasformati, founded in
1743. In the academy, characterized by a predominantly aristocratic component, the new Enlightenment theories were debated, trying, however, to reconcile them with classical traditions. Among the members of the Accademia dei Trasformati there was also
Pietro Verri, who, however, soon broke away from it to create, together with his brother Alessandro, the Accademia dei Pugni in
1761, whose name was inspired by the animosity with which they discussed. Connected to the Accademia dei Pugni was the magazine
Il Caffè, a cultural sheet close to the Enlightenment theories inspired by the first modern newspapers such as
The Spectator. In addition to the Verri brothers, among the students of the Accademia dei Pugni there was another of the most famous Italian Enlightenment figures:
Cesare Beccaria. Beccaria's is the most famous work of the Italian Enlightenment: the juridical treatise
Dei delitti e delle pene published in 1763, in which, referring to the theories of the philosophes and to some recent legislations such as that of Empress
Elizabeth of Russia, he proposed with rigorous logic the abolition of torture and the death penalty. The work was also admired by
Voltaire and the
Encyclopédistes and had much influence on sovereigns such as
Catherine II of Russia,
Maria Theresa of Austria, but especially on the Grand Duchy of Tuscany, where
Peter Leopold in 1786 abolished torture and the death penalty, followed by his brother
Joseph II of Austria. The Enlightenment brought new stimuli also to art and poetry: an important poet with Enlightenment ideas was
Giuseppe Parini, another great exponent of the Lombard Enlightenment, who satirized the nobility and its privileges in the poem Il Giorno (The Day), while in the theater encouraged playwrights and dramatists towards new ideas: this is the case of
Vittorio Alfieri and
Carlo Goldoni. , Aula Scarpa,
Leopoldo Pollack, 1785- 1786. Of the enlightened Milanese school are also remembered
Paolo Frisi,
Ruggero Boscovich, Alfonso Longo and
Gian Rinaldo Carli, all contributors to
Il Caffè. In the Duchy of Milan the Empress Maria Theresa and her son Giuseppe II gave great impulse to the spread of the new Enlightenment theories and in particular through the rebirth of the
University of Pavia, in fact the sovereigns, inspired by the principles of enlightened absolutism, made significant administrative reforms to the university, which became one of the best in Europe, they provided it with new buildings and laboratories and called to teach professors of continental fame, such as
Alessandro Volta,
Antonio Scarpa,
Lazzaro Spallanzani and
Lorenzo Mascheroni. The new ideas had repercussions not only in teaching, but also in rights, so much so that in 1777 Maria Pellegrina Amoretti graduated from Pavia, the first woman to receive a degree in law from an Italian university. ==List of Italian enlighteners==