Born in
Galliate, near
Novara, Custodi was by profession a
lawyer, but soon entered into
journalism and directed the
newspaper ''L'Amico della libertà italiana''. He was arrested by
Napoleon but freed after the establishment of the
Kingdom of Italy and appointed secretary-general of the finance department in
Milan. Later he was made a
baron and became a state councilor. He died in
Galbiate, near Milan, in 1842. Custodi continued
Pietro Verri's
History of Milan and edited the unpublished works of
Baretti; as an economist he is widely known as the editor of a collection of the principal Italian economists in fifty volumes. == Works ==