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Code of Hammurabi

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Code of Hammurabi
The Louvre stele
Createdc. 1792–1750 BC (middle chronology)
Location
Author(s)King Hammurabi of Babylon
Media typeBasalt stele[1][2]
SubjectLaw, justice
PurposeDebated: legislation, law report, or jurisprudence
Full Text
Code of Hammurabi at Wikisource

The Code of Hammurabi is a Babylonian legal text composed during 1755–1750 BC. It is the longest, best-organised, and best-preserved legal text from the ancient Near East. It is written in the Old Babylonian dialect of Akkadian, purportedly by Hammurabi, sixth king of the First Dynasty of Babylon. The primary copy of the text is inscribed on a basalt stele 2.25 m (7 ft 4+12 in) tall.

The stele was rediscovered in 1901 at the site of Susa in present-day Iran, where it had been taken as plunder six hundred years after its creation. The text itself was copied and studied by Mesopotamian scribes for over a millennium. The stele now resides in the Louvre Museum.

The top of the stele features an image in relief of Hammurabi with Shamash, the Babylonian sun god and god of justice. Below the relief are about 4,130 lines of cuneiform text: one fifth contains a prologue and epilogue in poetic style, while the remaining four fifths contain what are generally called the laws. In the prologue, Hammurabi claims to have been granted his rule by the gods "to prevent the strong from oppressing the weak". The laws are casuistic, expressed as "if ... then" conditional sentences. Their scope is broad, including, for example, criminal law, family law, property law, and commercial law.

Modern scholars responded to the Code with admiration at its perceived fairness and respect for the rule of law, and at the complexity of Old Babylonian society. There was also much discussion of its influence on the Mosaic Law. Scholars quickly identified lex talionis—the "eye for an eye" principle—underlying the two collections. Debate among Assyriologists has since centred around several aspects of the Code: its purpose, its underlying principles, its language, and its relation to earlier and later law collections.

Despite the uncertainty surrounding these issues, Hammurabi is regarded outside Assyriology as an important figure in the history of law and the document as a true legal code. The U.S. Capitol has a relief portrait of Hammurabi alongside those of other historic lawgivers. There are replicas of the stele in numerous institutions, including the headquarters of the United Nations in New York City and the Pergamon Museum in Berlin.

Background

Hammurabi

 
Babylonian territory before (red) and after (orange) Hammurabi's reign

Hammurabi (or Hammurapi), the sixth king of the Amorite First Dynasty of Babylon, ruled from 1792 to 1750 BC (middle chronology). He secured Babylonian dominance over the Mesopotamian plain through military prowess, diplomacy, and treachery. When Hammurabi inherited his father Sin-Muballit's throne,[3] Babylon held little local sway; the local hegemon was Rim-Sin of Larsa. Hammurabi waited until Rim-Sin grew old, then conquered his territory in one swift campaign, leaving his organisation intact.[4] Later, Hammurabi betrayed allies in Eshnunna, Elam, and Mari to gain their territories.[5]

Hammurabi had an aggressive foreign policy, but his letters suggest he was concerned with the welfare of his many subjects and was interested in law and justice.[6] He commissioned extensive construction works, and in his letters, he frequently presents himself as his people's shepherd.[7] Justice is also a theme of the prologue to the Code,[8] and "the word translated 'justice' [ešērum]... is one whose root runs through both prologue and epilogue".[9]

Earlier law collections

Although Hammurabi's Code was the first Mesopotamian law collection to be discovered, it was not the first written; several earlier collections survive. These collections were written in Sumerian and Akkadian. They also purport to have been written by rulers. There were almost certainly more such collections, as statements of other rulers suggest the custom was widespread.[10] The similarities between these law collections make it tempting to assume a consistent underlying legal system.[10] As with the Code of Hammurabi, however, it is difficult to interpret the purpose and underlying legal systems of these earlier collections, prompting numerous scholars to question whether this should be attempted.[11] Extant collections include:

There are additionally thousands of documents from the practice of law, from before and during the Old Babylonian period. These documents include contracts, judicial rulings, letters on legal cases, and reform documents such as that of Urukagina, king of Lagash in the mid-3rd millennium BC, whose reforms combatted corruption. Mesopotamia has the most comprehensive surviving legal corpus from before the Digest of Justinian, even compared to those from ancient Greece and Rome.[14]

Copies

Louvre stele

 
The excavation of the Susa acropolis in 1897–1898, four years before the Code was found at the site
 
The Royal City (left) and Acropolis (right) of Susa in 2007

The first copy of the text found, and still the most complete, is on a 2.25 m (7 ft 4+12 in) stele. The stele is now displayed on the ground floor of the Louvre, in Room 227 of the Richelieu wing.[15] At the top is an image of Hammurabi with Shamash, the Babylonian sun god and god of justice. Below the image are about 4,130 lines of cuneiform text: One fifth contain a prologue and epilogue, while the remaining four fifths contain what are generally called the laws.[16] Near the bottom, seven columns of the laws, each with more than eighty lines, were polished and erased in antiquity.[17] The stele was found in three large fragments and reconstructed.[18] It is 225 cm (7 ft 4+12 in) high, with a circumference is 165 cm (5 ft 5 in) at the summit and 190 cm (6 ft 3 in) at the base.[18] Hammurabi's image is 65 cm (2 ft 1+12 in) high and 60 cm (1 ft 11+12 in) wide.[18]

The Louvre stele was found at the site of the ancient Elamite city of Susa. Susa is in modern-day Khuzestan Province, Iran (Persia at the time of excavation). The stele was excavated by the French Archaeological Mission under the direction of Jacques de Morgan.[19] Father Jean-Vincent Scheil published the initial report in the fourth volume of the Reports of the Delegation to Persia (Mémoires de la Délégation en Perse). According to Scheil, the stele's fragments were found on the tell of the Susa acropolis (l'Acropole de Suse), between December 1901 and January 1902.[18] The few, large fragments made assembly easy.[18]

Scheil hypothesised that the stele had been taken to Susa by the Elamite king Shutruk-Nakhunte and that he had commissioned the erasure of several columns of laws to write his legend there.[18] It has been proposed that the relief portion of the stele, especially the beards of Hammurabi and Shamash, was reworked at the same time.[20] Roth suggests the stele was taken as plunder from Sippar,[21] where Hammurabi lived towards the end of his reign.[22]

Other copies

Fragments of a second and possibly third stele recording the Code were found along with the Louvre stele at Susa.[23] Over fifty manuscripts containing the laws are known. They were found not only in Susa but also in Babylon, Nineveh, Assur, Borsippa, Nippur, Sippar, Ur, Larsa, and more.[24] Copies were created during Hammurabi's reign, and also after it, since the text became a part of the scribal curriculum.[25] Copies have been found dating from one thousand years after the stele's creation,[17] and a catalogue from the library of Neo-Assyrian king Ashurbanipal (685–631 BC) lists a copy of the "judgments of Hammurabi".[26] The additional copies fill in most of the stele's original text, including much of the erased section.[17]

Early scholarship

 
Father Jean-Vincent Scheil, first modern editor of the Code

The editio princeps of the Code was published by Father Jean-Vincent Scheil in 1902,[27] in the fourth volume of the Reports of the Delegation to Persia (Mémoires de la Délégation en Perse). After a brief introduction with details of the excavation,[28] Scheil gave a transliteration and a free translation into French,[29] as well as a selection of images.[30] Editions in other languages soon followed: in German by Hugo Winckler in 1902,[31] in English by C. H. W. Johns in 1903,[32] and in Italian by Pietro Bonfante, also in 1903.[33]

The Code was thought to be the earliest Mesopotamian law collection when it was rediscovered in 1902—for example, C. H. W. Johns' 1903 book was titled The Oldest Code of Laws in the World.[32] The English writer H. G. Wells included Hammurabi in the first volume of The Outline of History, and to Wells too the Code was "the earliest known code of law".[34] However, three earlier collections were rediscovered afterwards: the Code of Lipit-Ishtar in 1947, the Laws of Eshnunna in 1948, and the Code of Ur-Nammu in 1952.[35] Early commentators dated Hammurabi and the stele to the 23rd century BC.[36] However, this is an earlier estimate than even the "ultra-long chronology" would support. The Code was compiled near the end of Hammurabi's reign.[37] This was deduced partly from the list of his achievements in the prologue.[38]

Scheil enthused about the stele's importance and perceived fairness, calling it "a moral and political masterpiece".[18] C. H. W. Johns called it "one of the most important monuments in the history of the human race".[39] He remarked that "there are many humanitarian clauses and much protection is given the weak and the helpless",[40] and even lauded a "wonderful modernity of spirit".[41] John Dyneley Prince called the Code's rediscovery "the most important event which has taken place in the development of Assyriological science since the days of Rawlinson and Layard".[42] Charles Francis Horne commended the "wise law-giver" and his "celebrated code".[43] James Henry Breasted noted the Code's "justice to the widow, the orphan, and the poor", but remarked that it "also allows many of the old and naïve ideas of justice to stand".[44] Commentators praised the advanced society they believed the Code evinced.[45] Several singled out perceived secularism: Owen Jenkins,[46] for example, but even Charles Souvay for the Catholic Encyclopedia, who opined that unlike the Mosaic Law the Code was "founded upon the dictates of reason".[27] The question of the Code's influence on the Mosaic Law received much early attention.[47] Scholars also identified Hammurabi with the Biblical figure Amraphel,[48] but this proposal has since been abandoned.[49]

"Frame"

Relief

 
The relief on the Louvre stele

The relief appears to show Hammurabi standing before a seated Shamash.[23] Shamash wears the horned crown of divinity[50] and has a solar attribute, flames,[51] spouting from his shoulders.[52] Contrastingly, Scheil, in his editio princeps,[27] identified the seated figure as Hammurabi and the standing figure as Shamash.[18] Scheil also held that the scene showed Shamash dictating to Hammurabi while Hammurabi held a scribe's stylus, gazing attentively at the god.[18] Martha Roth lists other interpretations: "that the king is offering the laws to the god; that the king is accepting or offering the emblems of sovereignty of the rod and ring; or—most probably—that these emblems are the measuring tools of the rod-measure and rope-measure used in temple-building".[53] Hammurabi may even be imitating Shamash.[54] It is certain, though, that the draughtsman showed Hammurabi's close links to the divine realm,[55] using composition and iconography.[56]

Prologue

The prologue and epilogue together occupy one-fifth of the text. Out of around 4,130 lines, the prologue occupies 300 lines and the epilogue occupies 500.[16] They are in ring composition around the laws, though there is no visual break distinguishing them from the laws.[57] Both are written in poetic style,[58] and, as William W. Davies wrote, "contain much ... which sounds very like braggadocio".[59]

The 300-line prologue begins with an etiology of Hammurabi's royal authority (1–49). Anum, the Babylonian sky god and king of the gods, granted rulership over humanity to Marduk. Marduk chose the centre of his earthly power to be Babylon, which in the real world worshipped him as its tutelary god. Marduk established the office of kingship within Babylon. Finally, Anum, along with the Babylonian wind god Enlil, chose Hammurabi to be Babylon's king. Hammurabi was to rule "to prevent the strong from oppressing the weak" (37–39: dannum enšam ana lā ḫabālim). He was to rise like Shamash over the Mesopotamians (the ṣalmāt qaqqadim, literally the "black-headed people") and illuminate the land (40–44).[60][note 1]

Hammurabi then lists his achievements and virtues (50–291). These are expressed in noun form, in the Akkadian first person singular nominal sentence construction "[noun] ... anāku" ("I am [noun]").[61] The first nominal sentence (50–53) is short: "I am Hammurabi, the shepherd, selected by the god Enlil" (ḫammurabi rē'ûm nibīt enlil anāku). Then Hammurabi continues for over 200 lines in a single nominal sentence with the anāku delayed to the very end (291).[62][note 1]

Hammurabi repeatedly calls himself na'dum, "pious" (lines 61, 149, 241, and 272). The metaphor of Hammurabi as his people's shepherd also recurs. It was a common metaphor for ancient Near Eastern kings, but is perhaps justified by Hammurabi's interest in his subjects' affairs.[63] His affinities with many different gods are stressed throughout. He is portrayed as dutiful in restoring and maintaining temples and peerless on the battlefield. The list of his accomplishments has helped establish that the text was written late in Hammurabi's reign. After the list, Hammurabi explains that he fulfilled Marduk's request to establish "truth and justice" (kittam u mīšaram) for the people (292–302), although the prologue never directly references the laws.[64] The prologue ends "at that time:" (303: inūmišu) and the laws begin.[65][note 1]

Epilogue

 
Ea/Enki, god of wisdom whom Hammurabi implores to confuse any defacer of his stele, depicted on a cylinder seal c. 2300 BC

Unlike the prologue, the 500-line epilogue is explicitly related to the laws.[64] The epilogue begins (3144'–3151'): "these are the just decisions which Hammurabi ... has established" (dīnāt mīšarim ša ḫammurabi... ukinnu-ma). He exalts his laws and his magnanimity (3152'–3239').[66] He then expresses a hope that "any wronged man who has a lawsuit" (awīlum ḫablum ša awātam iraššû) may have the laws of the stele read aloud to him and know his rights (3240'–3256').[67] This would bring Hammurabi praise (3257'–3275') and divine favour (3276'–3295').[68] Hammurabi wishes for good fortune for any ruler who heeds his pronouncements and respects his stele (3296'–3359').[69] However, he invokes the wrath of the gods on any man who disobeys or erases his pronouncements (3360'–3641', the end of the text).[70][note 1]

The epilogue contains much legal imagery, and the phrase "to prevent the strong from oppressing the weak" (3202'–3203': dannum enšam ana lā ḫabālim)[71] is reused from the prologue. However, the king's main concern appears to be ensuring that his achievements are not forgotten and his name not sullied.[72] The list of curses heaped upon any future defacer is 281 lines long and extremely forceful. Some of the curses are very vivid: "may the god Sin ... decree for him a life that is no better than death" (3486'–3508': sîn... balāṭam ša itti mūtim šitannu ana šīmtim lišīmšum);[73] "may he [the future defacer] conclude every day, month, and year of his reign with groaning and mourning" (3497'–3501': ūmī warḫī šanāt palēšu ina tānēḫim u dimmatim lišaqti);[73] may he experience "the spilling of his life force like water" (3435'–3436': tabāk napištišu kīma mê).[74] Hammurabi implores a variety of gods individually to turn their particular attributes against the defacer. For example: "may the [storm] god Adad ... deprive him of the benefits of rain from heaven and flood from the springs" (3509'–3515': adad... zunnī ina šamê mīlam ina nagbim līṭeršu);[73] "may the god [of wisdom] Ea ... deprive him of all understanding and wisdom, and may he lead him into confusion" (3440'–3451': ea... uznam u nēmeqam līṭeršu-ma ina mīšītim littarrūšu).[74][note 1] Gods and goddesses are invoked in this order:[70]

  1. Anum (3387'–3394')
  2. Enlil (3395'–3422')
  3. Ninlil (3423'–3439')
  4. Ea (3440'–3458')
  5. Shamash (3459'–3485')
  6. Sin (3486'–3508')
  7. Adad (3509'–3525')
  8. Zababa (3526'–3536')
  9. Ishtar (3537'–3573')
  10. Nergal (3574'–3589')
  11. Nintu (3590'–3599')
  12. Ninkarrak (3600'–3619')
  13. All the gods (3620'–3635')
  14. Enlil, a second time (3636'–3641')

Laws

The Code of Hammurabi is the longest and best-organised legal text from the ancient Near East,[75] as well as the best-preserved.[76] The classification below (columns 1–3) is Driver & Miles',[77] with several amendments, and Roth's translation is used.[78] Laws represented by letters are those reconstructed primarily from documents other than the Louvre stele.

Legal areas covered in the Code of Hammurabi, along with specific provisions and examples
Legal area Laws Specific provisions Example (English) Example (Akkadian)
Offences against the administration of law 1–5
  • false charges (1–2)
  • false testimony (3–4)
  • falsification of judgement (5)
If a man accuses another man and charges him with homicide, but cannot bring proof against him, his accuser shall be killed. (1)[79] šumma awīlum awīlam ubbir-ma nērtam elišu iddi-ma lā uktīnšu mubbiršu iddâk (1)
Property offences 6–25
  • stealing and receiving stolen property (6–13)
  • kidnapping (14)
  • harbouring fugitive slaves (15–20)
  • breaking and entering (21)
  • burglary (22–24)
  • looting burning houses (25)
If a man breaks into a house, they shall kill him and hang him(?) in front of that very breach. (21)[80] šumma awīlum bītam ipluš ina pāni pilšim šuāti idukkūšu-ma iḫallalūšu (21)
Land and houses 26–k
  • tenure of fiefs (26–41)
  • duties of farmers (42–48)
  • debts of farmers (49–52)
  • irrigation offences (53–56)
  • cattle trespass (57–58)
  • cutting down trees (59)
  • care of date orchards (60–a)
  • offences connected with houses (b–k)
If a man has a debt lodged against him, and the storm-god Adad devastates his field or a flood sweeps away the crops, or there is no grain grown in the field due to insufficient water—in that year he will not repay grain to his creditor; he shall suspend performance of his contract [literally "wet his clay tablet"] and he will not give interest payments for that year. (48)[81] šumma awīlum ḫubullum elišu ibašši-ma eqelšu adad irtaḫiṣ u lū bibbulum itbal u lū ina lā mê še'um ina eqlim lā ittabši ina šattim šuāti še'am ana bēl ḫubullišu ul utār ṭuppašu uraṭṭab u ṣibtam ša šattim šuāti ul inaddin (48)
Commerce l–126
  • loans and trade (l–107)
  • innkeeping (108–111)
  • fraud by couriers (112)
  • distraint and pledge of persons for debt (113–119)
  • safe custody or deposit (120–126)
If a merchant should give silver to a trading agent for an investment venture, and he [the trading agent] incurs a loss on his journeys, he shall return silver to the merchant in the amount of the capital sum. (102)[82] šumma tamkārum ana šamallim kaspam ana tadmiqtim ittadin-ma ašar illiku bitiqtam ītamar qaqqad kaspim ana tamkārim utār (102)
Marriage, family, and property 127–194
  • slander of ugbabtum-priestesses or married women (127)
  • definition of "married woman" (128)
  • adultery (129–132)
  • remarriage in husbands' absence (133–136)
  • divorce (137–143)
  • marriage to nadītum-women (144–147)
  • maintenance of sick wives (148–149)
  • gifts from husbands to wives (150)
  • liability of spouses for debt (151–152)
  • murder of husbands (153)
  • incest (154–158)
  • inchoate marriage (159–161)
  • devolution of marriage-gifts after wives' deaths (162–164)
  • gifts to sons inter vivos (165)
  • succession amongst sons (166–167)
  • disinheritance of sons (168–169)
  • legitimation (170)
  • widows' property (171–174)
  • marriage of awīlum-class women to slaves (175–176)
  • remarriage of widows (177)
  • sacral women (178–184)
  • adoption and nursing of infants (185–194)
If a man takes in adoption a young child at birth [literally "in its water"] and then rears him, that rearling will not be reclaimed. (185)[83] šumma awīlum ṣeḫram ina mêšu ana mārūtim ilqe-ma urtabbīšu tarbītum šī ul ibbaqqar (185)
Assault 195–214
  • assaults on fathers (195)
  • assaults on awīlum-class men (196–208)
  • assaults causing miscarriage (209–214)
If an [awīlum] should blind the eye of another [awīlum], they shall blind his eye. (196)[84] šumma awīlum īn mār awīlim uḫtappid īnšu uḫappadū (196)
Professional men 215–240
  • surgeons (215–223)
  • veterinary surgeons (224–225)
  • barbers (226–227)
  • builders (228–233)
  • shipbuilders and boatmen (234–240)
If a builder constructs a house for a man but does not make it conform to specifications so that a wall then buckles, that builder shall make that wall sound using his own silver. (233)[85] šumma itinnum bītam ana awīlim īpuš-ma šipiršu lā ušteṣbi-ma igārum iqtūp itinnum šū ina kasap ramānišu igāram šuāti udannan (233)
Agriculture 241–273
  • oxen (241–252)
  • theft of fodder by tenants (253–256)
  • hire of agricultural labourers (257–258)
  • theft of agricultural implements (259–260)
  • hire of herdsmen (261)
  • duties of shepherds (262–267)
  • hire of beasts and wagons (268–272)
  • hire of seasonal labourers (273)
If an ox gores to death a man while it is passing through the streets, that case has no basis for a claim. (250)[86] šumma alpum sūqam ina alākišu awīlam ikkip-ma uštamīt dīnum šū rugummâm ul išu (250)
Rates of hire 274–277
  • wages of craftsmen (274)
  • hire of boats (275–277)
If a man rents a boat of 60-[kur] capacity, he shall give one sixth [of a shekel] of silver per day as its hire. (277)[87] šumma awīlum elep šūšim īgur ina ūmim ištēn šuduš kaspam idīša inaddin (277)
Slaves 278–282
  • warranties on sale of slaves (278–279)
  • purchase of slaves abroad (280–281)
  • denial of mastership (282)
If a slave should declare to his master, "You are not my master", he [the master] shall bring charge and proof against him that he is indeed his slave, and his master shall cut off his ear. (281)[87] šumma wardum ana bēlišu ul bēlī atta iqtabi kīma warassu ukānšu-ma bēlšu uzunšu inakkis (281)

Theories of purpose

The purpose and legal authority of the Code have been disputed since the mid-20th century.[88] Theories fall into three main categories: that it is legislation, whether a code of law or a body of statutes; that it is a sort of law report, containing records of past cases and judgments; and that it is an abstract work of jurisprudence. The jurisprudence theory has gained much support within Assyriology.[89]

Legislation

 
 
Justinian I of Byzantium (L) and Napoléon Bonaparte of France (R) both created legal codes to which the Louvre stele has been compared.

The term "code" presupposes that the document was intended to be enforced as legislation. It was used by Scheil in his editio princeps,[90] and widely adopted afterwards. C. H. W. Johns, one of the most prolific early commentators on the document, proclaimed that "the Code well deserves its name".[41] Recent Assyriologists have used the term without comment,[91] as well as scholars outside Assyriology.[92] However, only if the text was intended as enforced legislation can it truly be called a code of law and its provisions laws.

The document, on first inspection, resembles a highly organised code similar to the Code of Justinian and the Napoleonic Code.[93] There is also evidence that dīnātum, which in the Code of Hammurabi sometimes denote individual "laws", were enforced.[94] One copy of the Code calls it a ṣimdat šarrim, "royal decree", which denotes a kind of enforced legislation.[95]

However, the arguments against this view are strong. Firstly, it would make a very unusual code—Reuven Yaron called the designation "Code" a "persistent misnomer".[96] Vital areas of society and commerce are omitted.[97] For example, Marc Van De Mieroop observes that the Code "deals with cattle and agricultural fields, but it almost entirely ignores the work of shepherds, vital to Babylonia's economy".[98] Then, against the legislation theory more generally, highly implausible circumstances are covered, such as threshing with goats, animals far too unruly for the task (law 270).[99] The laws are also strictly casuistic ("if ... then"); unlike in the Mosaic Law, there are no apodictic laws (general commands). These would more obviously suggest prescriptive legislation. The strongest argument against the legislation theory, however, is that most judges appear to have paid the Code no attention. This line of criticism originated with Benno Landsberger in 1950.[88] No Mesopotamian legal document explicitly references the Code or any other law collection,[93] despite the great scale of the corpus.[100] Two references to prescriptions on "a stele" (narû)[101] come closest. In contrast, numerous judgments cite royal mīšarum-decrees.[93] Raymond Westbrook held that this strengthened the argument from silence that ancient Near Eastern legal "codes" had legal import.[102] Furthermore, many Old Babylonian judgments run entirely counter to the Code's prescriptions.[103]

Law report

 
A British Museum display of tablets from the Library of Ashurbanipal. The Library lists a copy of the "judgments of Hammurabi" over a millennium after Hammurabi's death.

A second theory is that the Code is a sort of law report, and as such contains records of past cases and judgments, albeit phrased abstractly. This would provide one explanation for the casuistic format of the "laws"; indeed, Jean Bottéro believed he had found a record of a case that inspired one.[104] However, such finds are inconclusive and very rare, despite the scale of the Mesopotamian legal corpus.[105] Furthermore, legal judgments were frequently recorded in Mesopotamia, and they recount the facts of the case without generalising them.[106] These judgments were concerned almost exclusively with points of fact, prompting Martha Roth to comment: "I know of only one case out of thousands extant that might be said to revolve around a point of law".[107]

Jurisprudence

A third theory, which has gained traction within Assyriology, is that the Code is not a true code but an abstract treatise on how judgments should be formulated. This led Fritz Rudolf Kraus, in an early formulation of the theory, to call it jurisprudence (Rechtssprüche).[108] Kraus proposed that it was a work of Mesopotamian scholarship in the same category as omen collections like šumma ālu and ana ittišu.[108] Others have provided their own versions of this theory.[109] A. Leo Oppenheim remarked that the Code of Hammurabi and similar Mesopotamian law collections "represent an interesting formulation of social criticism and should not be taken as normative directions".[110]

This interpretation bypasses the problem of low congruence between the Code and actual legal judgments. Secondly, the Code does bear striking similarities to other works of Mesopotamian scholarship. Key points of similarity are the list format and the order of the items,[111] which Ann Guinan describes as a complex "serial logic".[112] Marc Van De Mieroop explains that, in common with other works of Mesopotamian scholarship such as omen lists, king lists, and god lists, the entries of the Code of Hammurabi are arranged according to two principles. These are "opposition"—whereby a variable in one entry is altered to make another entry—and "pointillism"—whereby new conditions are added to an entry, or paradigmatic series pursued, to generate a sequence.[113] Van De Mieroop provides the following examples:

If a physician performs major surgery with a bronze lancet upon an [awīlum] and thus heals the [awīlum], or opens an [awīlum]'s temple with a bronze lancet and thus heals the [awīlum]'s eye, he shall take ten shekels of silver (as his fee).

— Law 215[114]

If a physician performs major surgery with a bronze lancet upon an [awīlum] and thus causes the [awīlum]'s death, or opens an [awīlum]'s temple with a bronze lancet and thus blinds the [awīlum]'s eye, they shall cut off his hand.

— Law 218[114]

Laws 215 and 218 illustrate the principle of opposition: one variable of the first law, the outcome of the operations, is altered to create the second.[115]

If there is either a soldier or [an auxiliary] who is taken captive while serving in a royal fortress [...] if he should [...] return and get back to his city, they shall return to him his field and orchard and he himself shall perform his service obligation.

If there is either a soldier or [an auxiliary] who is taken captive in a royal fortress, and his son is able to perform the service obligation, the field and orchard shall be given to him, and he shall perform his father's service obligation.

If his son is young and is unable to perform his father's service obligation, one third of the field and orchard shall be given to his mother, and his mother shall raise him.

— Laws 27–29[116]

Here, following the principle of pointillism, circumstances are added to the first entry to create more entries.[117] Pointillism also lets list entries be generated by following paradigmatic series common to multiple branches of scholarship. It can thus explain the implausible entries. For example, in the case of the goat used for threshing (law 270),[118] the previous laws concern other animals that were used for threshing. The established series of domesticated beasts dictated that a goat come next.[119]

Wolfram von Soden, who decades earlier called this way of thinking Listenwissenschaft ("list science"),[120] often denigrated it.[121] However, more recent writers, such as Marc Van De Mieroop, Jean Bottéro, and Ann Guinan, have either avoided value judgments or expressed admiration. Lists were central to Mesopotamian science and logic, and their distinctive structural principles let entries be generated infinitely.[119] Linking the Code to the scribal tradition within which "list science" emerged also explains why trainee scribes copied and studied it for over a millennium.[24] The Code appears in a late Babylonian (7th–6th century BC) list of literary and scholarly texts.[122] No other law collection became so entrenched in the curriculum.[123] Rather than a code of laws, then, it may be a scholarly treatise.[101]

Much has been written on what the Code suggests about Old Babylonian society and its legal system.[failed verification] For example, whether it demonstrates that there were no professional advocates,[124] or that there were professional judges.[125] Scholars who approach the Code as a self-contained document renounce such claims.[126]

Underlying principles

One principle widely accepted to underlie the Code is lex talionis, or "eye for an eye". Laws 196 and 200 respectively prescribe an eye for an eye and a tooth for a tooth when one man destroys another's. Punishments determined by lex talionis could be transferred to the sons of the wrongdoer.[124] For example, law 229 states that the death of a homeowner in a house collapse necessitates the death of the house's builder. The following law 230 states that if the homeowner's son died, the builder's son must die also.[85]

Persons were not equal before the law; not just age and profession but also class and gender dictated the punishment or remedy they received. Three main kinds of person, awīlum, muškēnum, and wardum (male)/amtum (female), are mentioned throughout the Code. A wardum/amtum was a male/female slave. As for awīlum and muškēnum, though contentious, it seems likely that the difference was one of social class, with awīlum meaning something like "gentleman" and muškēnum something like "commoner".[127] The penalties were not necessarily stricter for a muškēnum than an awīlum: a muškēnum's life may have been cheaper, but so were some of his fines.[128] There was also inequality within these classes: laws 200 and 202, for example, show that one awīlum could be of higher rank than another.[129]

Martha Roth has shown[how?] that ideas of shame and honour motivated certain laws.[130]

The above principles are distant in spirit from modern systems of common and civil law, but some may be more familiar. One such principle is the presumption of innocence; the first two laws of the stele prescribe punishments, determined by lex talionis, for unsubstantiated accusations. Written evidence was valued highly,[131] especially in matters of contract.[43] One crime was given only one punishment.[132] The laws also recognized the importance of the intentions of a defendant.[124] Lastly, the Code's establishment on public stelae was supposedly intended to increase access to justice. Whether or not this was true, suggesting that a wronged man have the stele read aloud to him (lines 3240'–3254')[note 1] is a concrete measure in this direction, given the inaccessibility of scribal education in the Old Babylonian period.[133]

The prologue asserts that Hammurabi was chosen by the gods. Raymond Westbrook observed that in ancient Near Eastern law, "the king was the primary source of legislation".[134] However, they could delegate their god-given legal authority to judges.[135] However, as Owen B. Jenkins observed, the prescriptions themselves bear "an astonishing absence ... of all theological or even ceremonial law".[46]

Language

 
The text. The arrangement of the Code's cuneiform was antiquated when it was written.

The laws are written in the Old Babylonian dialect of Akkadian. Their style is regular and repetitive, and today they are a standard set text for introductory Akkadian classes.[136] However, as A. Leo Oppenheim summarises, the cuneiform signs themselves are "vertically arranged ... within boxes placed in bands side by side from right to left", an arrangement already antiquated by Hammurabi's time.[137]

The laws are expressed in casuistic format: they are conditional sentences with the case detailed in the protasis ("if" clause) and the remedy given in the apodosis ("then" clause). The protasis begins šumma, "if",[138] except when it adds to circumstances already specified in a previous law (e.g. laws 36, 38, and 40).[139] The preterite is used for simple past verbs in the protasis, or possibly for a simple conditional.[138] The perfect often appears at the end of the protasis after one or more preterites to convey sequence of action, or possibly a hypothetical conditional.[138] The durative, sometimes called the "present" in Assyriology, may express intention in the laws.[138] For ease of English reading, some translations give preterite and perfect verbs in the protasis a present sense.[140] In the apodosis, the verbs are in the durative, though the sense varies between permissive—"it is permitted that x happen"—and instructive—"x must/will happen".[141] In both protasis and apodosis, sequence of action is conveyed by suffixing verbs with -ma, "and".[142] -ma can also have the sense "but".[143]

The Code is relatively well-understood, but some items of its vocabulary are controversial.[vague] As mentioned, the terms awīlum and muškēnum have proved difficult to translate. They probably denote respectively a male member of a higher and lower social class.[144] Wolfram von Soden, in his Akkadisches Handwörterbuch, proposed that muškēnum was derived from šukênum, "to bow down/supplicate".[145] As a word for a man of low social standing, it has endured, possibly from a Sumerian root, into Arabic (miskīn), Italian (meschino), Spanish (mezquino), and French (mesquin).[146] However, some earlier translators, also seeking to explain the muškēnum's special treatment, translated it as "leper" and even "noble".[147] Some translators have supplied stilted readings for awīlum, such as "seignior",[148] "elite man",[149] and "member of the aristocracy";[150] others have left it untranslated.[151] Certain legal terms have also proved difficult to translate. For example, dīnum and dīttum can denote the law in general as well as individual laws, verdicts, divine pronouncements and other phenomena.[152] mīšarum can likewise denote the law in general as well as a kind of royal decree.[153]

Relation to other law collections

Other Mesopotamian

 
Prologue to the Code of Lipit-Ishtar

The Code of Hammurabi bears strong similarities to earlier Mesopotamian law collections. Many purport to have been written by rulers, and this tradition was probably widespread.[10] Earlier law collections express their god-given legitimacy similarly.[154] Like the Code of Hammurabi, they feature prologues and epilogues: the Code of Ur-Nammu has a prologue, the Code of Lipit-Ishtar a prologue and an epilogue, and the Laws of Eshnunna an epilogue. Also, like the Code of Hammurabi, they uphold the "one crime, one punishment" principle.[155] The cases covered and language used are, overall, strikingly similar.[10] Scribes were still copying earlier law collections, such as the Code of Ur-Nammu, when Hammurabi produced his own Code.[156] This suggests that earlier collections may have not only resembled the Code but influenced it. Raymond Westbrook maintained that there was a fairly consistent tradition of "ancient Near Eastern law" which included the Code of Hammurabi,[157] and that this was largely customary law.[158] Nonetheless, there are differences: for example, Stephen Bertman has suggested that where earlier collections are concerned with compensating victims, the Code is concerned with physically punishing offenders.[159] Additionally, the above conclusions of similarity and influence apply only to the law collections themselves. The actual legal practices from the context of each code are mysterious.[160]

The Code of Hammurabi also bears strong similarities to later Mesopotamian law collections: to the casuistic Middle Assyrian Laws and to the Neo-Babylonian Laws,[161] whose format is largely relative ("a man who ..."). It is easier to posit direct influence for these later collections, given the Code's survival through the scribal curriculum.[24] Lastly, although influence is more difficult to trace, there is evidence that the Hittite laws may have been part of the same tradition of legal writing outside Mesopotamia proper.[162]

Mosaic, Graeco-Roman, and modern

 
Moses receiving the law on Mount Sinai, depicted in the Byzantine Leo Bible

The relationship of the Code of Hammurabi to the Mosaic Law, specifically the Covenant Code of Exodus 20:22–23:19, has been a subject of discussion since its discovery.[47] Friedrich Delitzsch argued the case for strong influence in a 1902 lecture, in one episode of the "Babel und Bibel" ("Babel and Bible", or "Panbabylonism") debate on the influence of ancient Mesopotamian cultures on ancient Israel. However, he was met with strong resistance.[163] There was cultural contact between Mesopotamia and the Levant, and Middle Bronze Age tablets of casuistic cuneiform law have been found at Hazor.[164] There are also similarities between the Code of Hamurabi and the Covenant Code: in the casuistic format, in principles such as lex talionis ("eye for an eye"), and in the content of the provisions. Some similarities are striking, such as in the provisions concerning a man-goring ox (Code of Hammurabi laws 250–252,[86] Exodus 21:28–32).[165] Certain writers have posited direct influence: David P. Wright, for example, asserts that the Covenant Code is "directly, primarily, and throughout dependent upon the Laws of Hammurabi", "a creative rewriting of Mesopotamian sources ... to be viewed as an academic abstraction rather than a digest of laws".[166] Others[who?] posit indirect influence, such as via Aramaic or Phoenician intermediaries.[167] The consensus, however, is that the similarities are a result of inheriting common traditions.[168] In 1916, George A. Barton cited "a similarity of antecedents and of general intellectual outlook".[169] More recently, David Winton Thomas has stated: "There is no ground for assuming any direct borrowing by the Hebrew from the Babylonian. Even where the two sets of laws differ little in the letter, they differ much in the spirit".[170]

The influence of the Code of Hammurabi on later law collections is difficult to establish. Marc Van De Mieroop suggests that it may have influenced the Greek Gortyn Code and the Roman Twelve Tables.[171] However, even Van De Mieroop acknowledges that most Roman law is not similar to the Code, or likely to have been influenced by it.[172]

Knowing the Code's influence on modern law requires knowing its influence on Mosaic and Graeco-Roman law. Since this is contentious, commentators have restricted themselves to observing similarities and differences between the Code and, e.g., United States law and medieval law.[173] Some[who?] have remarked that the punishments found in the Code are no more severe, and, in some cases, less so.[174][needs update]

Law 238 stipulates that a sea captain, ship-manager, or ship charterer that saved a ship from total loss was only required to pay one-half the value of the ship to the ship-owner.[175][176][177] In the Digesta seu Pandectae (533), the second volume of the codification of laws ordered by Justinian I (527–565) of the Eastern Roman Empire, a legal opinion written by the Roman jurist Paulus at the beginning of the Crisis of the Third Century in 235 AD was included about the Lex Rhodia ("Rhodian law") that articulates the general average principle of marine insurance established on the island of Rhodes in approximately 1000 to 800 BC as a member of the Doric Hexapolis, plausibly by the Phoenicians during the proposed Dorian invasion and emergence of the purported Sea Peoples during the Greek Dark Ages (c. 1100 – c. 750) that led to the proliferation of the Doric Greek dialect.[178][179][180] The law of general average constitutes the fundamental principle that underlies all insurance.[179][better source needed]

Reception outside Assyriology

 
The relief portrait of Hammurabi in the U.S. Capitol, by Thomas Hudson Jones

The Code is often referred to in legal scholarship, where its provisions are assumed to be laws, and the document is assumed to be a true code of laws. This is also true outside academia.[181][original research?]

Hammurabi leads Babylon in five of the six Civilization video games.[182] There is a relief portrait of Hammurabi over the doors to the House Chamber of the U.S. Capitol, along with portraits of 22 others "noted for their work in establishing the principles that underlie American law".[183] There are replicas of the Louvre stele in institutions around the world,[citation needed] including the Headquarters of the United Nations in New York City[184] and the Peace Palace in The Hague (seat of the International Court of Justice).[185]

See also

References

Notes

  1. ^ a b c d e f CDLI (2019)'s line numbering, Roth (1995a)'s translation. The line numbers may seem low, since the CDLI edition does not include sections not found on the Louvre stele.

Citations

  1. ^ Sasson, Jack. Civilizations of the Ancient Near East. Hendrickson. pp. 901, 908. ISBN 0684192799.
  2. ^ Ross, Leslie. Art and Architecture of the World's Religions. Greenwood Press. p. 35.
  3. ^ Renger (2020).
  4. ^ Van De Mieroop (2007), pp. 92–93.
  5. ^ Van De Mieroop (2007), pp. 100–104.
  6. ^ Driver & Miles (1952), p. 52; Van De Mieroop (2007), pp. 111–113.
  7. ^ Van De Mieroop (2007), pp. 111–113.
  8. ^ Driver & Miles (1952), p. 36.
  9. ^ Driver & Miles (1952), p. 37.
  10. ^ a b c d Driver & Miles (1952), p. 9.
  11. ^ Kraus (1960), pp. 295–296; Bottéro (1992), p. 181; Roth (1995b), p. 13.
  12. ^ Roth (1995a), pp. 36–39.
  13. ^ Roth (1995a), p. 36.
  14. ^ Driver & Miles (1952), pp. 56–57.
  15. ^ Louvre (n.d.).
  16. ^ a b Roth (1995b), pp. 15–16.
  17. ^ a b c Roth (1995a), p. 74.
  18. ^ a b c d e f g h i Scheil (1902), p. 12.
  19. ^ Roth (1995b), pp. 23–24.
  20. ^ Ornan, Tallay, "Unfinished Business: the Relief on the Hammurabi Louvre Stele Revisited", Journal of Cuneiform Studies, vol. 71, pp. 85–109, 2019
  21. ^ Roth (1995b), pp. 21–22.
  22. ^ Driver & Miles (1952), pp. 29–30.
  23. ^ a b Roth (1995a), p. 73.
  24. ^ a b c Roth (1995b), p. 20.
  25. ^ Driver & Miles (1952), pp. 25–56; Van De Mieroop (2016), p. 145.
  26. ^ Van De Mieroop (2016), p. 147.
  27. ^ a b c Souvay (1910).
  28. ^ Scheil (1902), pp. 11–12.
  29. ^ Scheil (1902), pp. 13–162.
  30. ^ Scheil (1902), plates 3–15.
  31. ^ Winckler (1902).
  32. ^ a b Johns (1903a).
  33. ^ Bonfante (1903).
  34. ^ Wells (1920), p. 245.
  35. ^ Kramer (1988), pp. 51–52.
  36. ^ Johns (1903b), p. 257; Harper (1904), the title; Equitable Trust Company (1910), the title.
  37. ^ Driver & Miles (1952), p. 34ff.; Roth (1995a), p. 71.
  38. ^ Finkelstein (1961), p. 101.
  39. ^ Johns (1903a), p. v.
  40. ^ Johns (1904), p. 68.
  41. ^ a b Johns (1903b), p. 258.
  42. ^ Prince (1904), p. 601.
  43. ^ a b Horne (1915).
  44. ^ Breasted (1916), p. 131.
  45. ^ Johns (1903b), p. 257; Souvay (1910); Everts (1920), p. 45.
  46. ^ a b Jenkins (1905), p. 335.
  47. ^ a b Sampey (1904a); Sampey (1904b); Davies (1905); Johns (1914); Everts (1920); Edwards (1921).
  48. ^ Johns (1903a), pp. v–vi; Prince (1904), pp. 601–602; Souvay (1910).
  49. ^ North (1993), p. 5.
  50. ^ Van Buren (1943); Black & Green (1998), pp. 102–103; Slanski (2012), p. 106.
  51. ^ Black & Green (1998), p. 183.
  52. ^ Breasted (1916), p. 132.
  53. ^ Roth (1995b), pp. 22–23.
  54. ^ Charpin (2010), pp. 81–82.
  55. ^ Roth (1995b), p. 23.
  56. ^ Elsen-Novák & Novák (2006), pp. 148–149.
  57. ^ Roth (1995b), p. 16.
  58. ^ Huehnergard (2011), p. 160.
  59. ^ Davies (1905), p. 15.
  60. ^ Roth (1995a), pp. 76–77.
  61. ^ Huehnergard (2011), pp. 11–12.
  62. ^ Roth (1995a), pp. 77–80.
  63. ^ Van De Mieroop (2005), p. 82.
  64. ^ a b Driver & Miles (1952), pp. 40–41.
  65. ^ Roth (1995a), pp. 80–81.
  66. ^ Roth (1995a), pp. 133–134.
  67. ^ Roth (1995a), p. 134.
  68. ^ Roth (1995a), pp. 134–135.
  69. ^ Roth (1995a), pp. 135–136.
  70. ^ a b Roth (1995a), pp. 136–140.
  71. ^ Roth (1995a), p. 133.
  72. ^ Driver & Miles (1952), p. 37; Bottéro (1992), p. 167.
  73. ^ a b c Roth (1995a), p. 138.
  74. ^ a b Roth (1995a), p. 137.
  75. ^ Roth (1995a), p. 71.
  76. ^ Van De Mieroop (2016), p. 144.
  77. ^ Driver & Miles (1952), pp. 43–45.
  78. ^ Roth (1995a), pp. 76–142.
  79. ^ Roth (1995a), p. 81.
  80. ^ Roth (1995a), p. 85.
  81. ^ Roth (1995a), p. 90.
  82. ^ Roth (1995a), p. 100.
  83. ^ Roth (1995a), p. 119.
  84. ^ Roth (1995a), p. 121.
  85. ^ a b Roth (1995a), p. 125.
  86. ^ a b Roth (1995a), p. 128.
  87. ^ a b Roth (1995a), p. 132.
  88. ^ a b Kraus (1960), p. 292.
  89. ^ Kraus (1960); Oppenheim (1977); Bottéro (1992), chapter 10; Van De Mieroop (2016), chapters 6–7.
  90. ^ Souvay (1910); Kraus (1960), p. 283.
  91. ^ Pfeifer (2011); Rositani (2017).
  92. ^ Alkadry (2002–2003); Pearn (2016).
  93. ^ a b c Van De Mieroop (2016), p. 170.
  94. ^ Oppenheim & Reiner (1959), pp. 150–153.
  95. ^ Bottéro (1992), pp. 180–181.
  96. ^ Yaron (2013), p. 580.
  97. ^ Driver & Miles (1952), pp. 45ff.; Bottéro (1992), p. 161.
  98. ^ Van De Mieroop (2016), p. 165.
  99. ^ Van De Mieroop (2016), p. 167; Roth (1995a), p. 130.
  100. ^ Van De Mieroop (2016), p. 172.
  101. ^ a b Van De Mieroop (2016), p. 173.
  102. ^ Westbrook (2003), p. 19.
  103. ^ Oppenheim (1977), p. 211; Bottéro (1992), pp. 163–164; Roth (1995a), pp. 5–6.
  104. ^ Bottéro (1992), pp. 171–172.
  105. ^ Bottéro (1992), pp. 163–164.
  106. ^ Roth (2001); Klein (2007).
  107. ^ Roth (2001), p. 255.
  108. ^ a b Kraus (1960), p. 288.
  109. ^ Saggs (1965), pp. 80ff.; Oppenheim (1977), p. 287; Bottéro (1992), pp. 166–167; Van De Mieroop (2016), chapters 6–7.
  110. ^ Oppenheim (1977), p. 158.
  111. ^ Bottéro (1992), pp. 173ff.; Van De Mieroop (2016), pp. 165ff.
  112. ^ Guinan (2014), p. 115.
  113. ^ Van De Mieroop (2016), pp. 165ff..
  114. ^ a b Roth (1995a), p. 123.
  115. ^ Van De Mieroop (2016), p. 166.
  116. ^ Roth (1995a), p. 86.
  117. ^ Van De Mieroop (2016), pp. 166–167.
  118. ^ Roth (1995a), p. 130.
  119. ^ a b Van De Mieroop (2016), p. 167.
  120. ^ von Soden (1936).
  121. ^ von Soden (1936); von Soden (1994), pp. 146, 158.
  122. ^ Van De Mieroop (2016), p. 175.
  123. ^ Charpin (2010), p. 81.
  124. ^ a b c Johns (1911).
  125. ^ Charpin (2010), p. 52.
  126. ^ Kraus (1960), pp. 295–296; Roth (1995b), pp. 13ff.
  127. ^ Roth (1995a), pp. 72–73.
  128. ^ Jenkins (1905), p. 339.
  129. ^ Roth (1995b), pp. 34ff.; Roth (1995a), p. 121.
  130. ^ Roth (1995b), pp. 25ff.
  131. ^ Johns (1911); Roth (1995a), p. 72.
  132. ^ Prince (1904), p. 607.
  133. ^ George (2005), p. 7.
  134. ^ Westbrook (2003), p. 26.
  135. ^ Bottéro (1992), p. 165.
  136. ^ Richardson (2004), p. 7.
  137. ^ Oppenheim (1977), p. 240.
  138. ^ a b c d Roth (1995a), p. 8.
  139. ^ Roth (1995a), p. 88.
  140. ^ Roth (1995a); Van De Mieroop (2016), chapters 6–7.
  141. ^ Roth (1995a), pp. 7–8.
  142. ^ Huehnergard (2011), pp. 49–50.
  143. ^ Huehnergard (2011), p. 50.
  144. ^ Roth (1995a), pp. 8–9.
  145. ^ von Soden (1972), p. 684.
  146. ^ Wohl (1968), p. 6.
  147. ^ Johns (1914), p. 76.
  148. ^ Meek (1958), pp. 139ff.
  149. ^ Van De Mieroop (2016).
  150. ^ Bottéro (1992), p. 166.
  151. ^ Roth (1995a), pp. 76ff.
  152. ^ Kraus (1960), p. 285; Roth (1995b), p. 20; Charpin (2010), p. 72.
  153. ^ Kraus (1960), p. 294; Finkelstein (1961); Charpin (2010), p. 72.
  154. ^ Driver & Miles (1952), p. 5.
  155. ^ Van De Mieroop (2016), p. 161.
  156. ^ Van De Mieroop (2016), pp. 144–145.
  157. ^ Westbrook (2003), pp. 4ff..
  158. ^ Westbrook (2003), p. 21.
  159. ^ Bertman (2003), p. 71.
  160. ^ Kraus (1960), pp. 295–296; Roth (1995b), p. 13.
  161. ^ Roth (1995a), p. 145.
  162. ^ Roth (1995b), p. 19.
  163. ^ Ziolkowski (2012), p. 25.
  164. ^ Horowitz, Oshima & Vukosavović (2012).
  165. ^ Wright (2009), chapter 8.
  166. ^ Wright (2009), p. 3.
  167. ^ Van De Mieroop (2016), p. 152.
  168. ^ Wright (2009), p. vii.
  169. ^ Barton (1916), p. 340.
  170. ^ Thomas (1958), p. 28.
  171. ^ Van De Mieroop (2016), pp. 152–153.
  172. ^ Van De Mieroop (2016), pp. 153–154.
  173. ^ Equitable Trust Company (1910); Jenkins (1905); Driver & Miles (1952), p. 57; Van De Mieroop (2016), p. 154.
  174. ^ Johns (1903b), p. 258; Driver & Miles (1952), p. 57.
  175. ^ Hammurabi (1903). Translated by Sommer, Otto. "Code of Hammurabi, King of Babylon". Records of the Past. Washington, DC: Records of the Past Exploration Society. 2 (3): 86. Retrieved 20 June 2021. 238. If a skipper wrecks ... money to its owner.
  176. ^ Hammurabi (1904). "Code of Hammurabi, King of Babylon" (PDF). Liberty Fund. Translated by Harper, Robert Francis (2nd ed.). Chicago: University of Chicago Press. p. 85. (PDF) from the original on 13 June 2021. Retrieved 20 June 2021. §238. If a boatman sink ... one-half its value.
  177. ^ Hammurabi (1910). "Code of Hammurabi, King of Babylon". Avalon Project. Translated by King, Leonard William. New Haven, CT: Yale Law School. from the original on 10 May 2021. Retrieved 20 June 2021. 238. If a sailor wreck ... its value in money.
  178. ^ "The Civil Law, Volume I, The Opinions of Julius Paulus, Book II". Constitution.org. Translated by Scott, S.P. Central Trust Company. 1932. from the original on 24 June 2021. Retrieved 16 June 2021. TITLE VII. ON THE LEX RHODIA. It is provided by the Lex Rhodia that if merchandise is thrown overboard for the purpose of lightening a ship, the loss is made good by the assessment of all which is made for the benefit of all.
  179. ^ a b The Documentary History of Insurance, 1000 B.C. – 1875 A.D. Newark, NJ: Prudential Press. 1915. pp. 5–6. Retrieved 15 June 2021.
  180. ^ . Duhaime's Law Dictionary. Archived from the original on 24 June 2021. Retrieved 9 April 2016.
  181. ^ United Nations (1985); Schwartz (1993); Mark (2021); International Court of Justice (2014); Rattini (2019); Scharping (2020); United Nations (n.d.); Louvre (n.d.); Hammurabi Human Rights Organization (n.d.).
  182. ^ Civilopedia (n.d.).
  183. ^ Architect of the Capitol (n.d.).
  184. ^ United Nations (n.d.).
  185. ^ International Court of Justice (2014).

Sources

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  • Penn Museum (n.d.). "Law Code of Hammurabi". penn.museum. Penn Museum. from the original on 6 March 2021. Retrieved 16 February 2021.
  • Rattini, Kristin Baird (22 April 2019). "Who was Hammurabi?". nationalgeographic.com. National Geographic. from the original on 12 August 2020. Retrieved 16 February 2021.
  • Renger, Johannes M. (27 March 2020). "Hammurabi". Encyclopædia Britannica (online ed.). Encyclopædia Britannica. from the original on 27 June 2015. Retrieved 6 May 2021.
  • Scharping, Nathaniel (1 December 2020). "How the Ancient Code of Hammurabi Reveals a Society Both Similar and Alien to Ours". discovermagazine.com. Discover Magazine. from the original on 25 January 2021. Retrieved 16 February 2021.
  • Schwartz, Amy E. (15 April 1993). "The Louvre and the Lawgiver". The Washington Post. from the original on 7 March 2023. Retrieved 16 February 2021.
  • Stark, Julie; McNeill, Heather, eds. (2016). (PDF). kumc.edu. Kansas City, KS: University of Kansas Medical Center. Archived from the original (PDF) on 7 August 2021.
  • United Nations (n.d.). "Replica of The Codes of Hammurabi". un.org. United Nations. from the original on 19 April 2022. Retrieved 16 February 2021.
  • United Nations (1 August 1985). "Gift of Iraq to the United Nations". unmultimedia.org. United Nations. from the original on 10 May 2021. Retrieved 16 February 2021.
  • Waymarking (n.d.). "Code of Hammurabi – Pergamon Museum, Berlin, Germany". waymarking.com. Waymarking. from the original on 8 February 2021. Retrieved 16 February 2021.
  • Mark, Joshua J. (24 June 2021). "Code of Hammurabi". World History Encyclopedia. from the original on 4 May 2023. Retrieved 4 May 2023.

External links

  • CDLI's transliteration, normalisation, and translation
  • Scheil's editio princeps (in French)
  • King's translation
  • Johns' translation
  • Harper's translation (Wikisource)

code, hammurabi, 8611472, 338028, 8611472, 338028, louvre, stelecreatedc, 1792, 1750, middle, chronology, locationthe, louvre, paris, france, originally, sippar, mesopotamia, modern, iraq, found, susa, iran, replicas, variousauthor, king, hammurabi, babylonmed. 48 51 40 13 N 2 20 16 9 E 48 8611472 N 2 338028 E 48 8611472 2 338028 Code of HammurabiThe Louvre steleCreatedc 1792 1750 BC middle chronology LocationThe Louvre Paris France originally Sippar Mesopotamia modern day Iraq found at Susa Iran Replicas variousAuthor s King Hammurabi of BabylonMedia typeBasalt stele 1 2 SubjectLaw justicePurposeDebated legislation law report or jurisprudenceFull TextCode of Hammurabi at WikisourceThe Code of Hammurabi is a Babylonian legal text composed during 1755 1750 BC It is the longest best organised and best preserved legal text from the ancient Near East It is written in the Old Babylonian dialect of Akkadian purportedly by Hammurabi sixth king of the First Dynasty of Babylon The primary copy of the text is inscribed on a basalt stele 2 25 m 7 ft 4 1 2 in tall The stele was rediscovered in 1901 at the site of Susa in present day Iran where it had been taken as plunder six hundred years after its creation The text itself was copied and studied by Mesopotamian scribes for over a millennium The stele now resides in the Louvre Museum The top of the stele features an image in relief of Hammurabi with Shamash the Babylonian sun god and god of justice Below the relief are about 4 130 lines of cuneiform text one fifth contains a prologue and epilogue in poetic style while the remaining four fifths contain what are generally called the laws In the prologue Hammurabi claims to have been granted his rule by the gods to prevent the strong from oppressing the weak The laws are casuistic expressed as if then conditional sentences Their scope is broad including for example criminal law family law property law and commercial law Modern scholars responded to the Code with admiration at its perceived fairness and respect for the rule of law and at the complexity of Old Babylonian society There was also much discussion of its influence on the Mosaic Law Scholars quickly identified lex talionis the eye for an eye principle underlying the two collections Debate among Assyriologists has since centred around several aspects of the Code its purpose its underlying principles its language and its relation to earlier and later law collections Despite the uncertainty surrounding these issues Hammurabi is regarded outside Assyriology as an important figure in the history of law and the document as a true legal code The U S Capitol has a relief portrait of Hammurabi alongside those of other historic lawgivers There are replicas of the stele in numerous institutions including the headquarters of the United Nations in New York City and the Pergamon Museum in Berlin Contents 1 Background 1 1 Hammurabi 1 2 Earlier law collections 2 Copies 2 1 Louvre stele 2 2 Other copies 3 Early scholarship 4 Frame 4 1 Relief 4 2 Prologue 4 3 Epilogue 5 Laws 6 Theories of purpose 6 1 Legislation 6 2 Law report 6 3 Jurisprudence 7 Underlying principles 8 Language 9 Relation to other law collections 9 1 Other Mesopotamian 9 2 Mosaic Graeco Roman and modern 10 Reception outside Assyriology 11 See also 12 References 12 1 Notes 12 2 Citations 12 3 Sources 12 3 1 Books and journals 12 3 2 Web 13 External linksBackground EditHammurabi Edit Babylonian territory before red and after orange Hammurabi s reignHammurabi or Hammurapi the sixth king of the Amorite First Dynasty of Babylon ruled from 1792 to 1750 BC middle chronology He secured Babylonian dominance over the Mesopotamian plain through military prowess diplomacy and treachery When Hammurabi inherited his father Sin Muballit s throne 3 Babylon held little local sway the local hegemon was Rim Sin of Larsa Hammurabi waited until Rim Sin grew old then conquered his territory in one swift campaign leaving his organisation intact 4 Later Hammurabi betrayed allies in Eshnunna Elam and Mari to gain their territories 5 Hammurabi had an aggressive foreign policy but his letters suggest he was concerned with the welfare of his many subjects and was interested in law and justice 6 He commissioned extensive construction works and in his letters he frequently presents himself as his people s shepherd 7 Justice is also a theme of the prologue to the Code 8 and the word translated justice eserum is one whose root runs through both prologue and epilogue 9 Earlier law collections Edit Main article Cuneiform law Although Hammurabi s Code was the first Mesopotamian law collection to be discovered it was not the first written several earlier collections survive These collections were written in Sumerian and Akkadian They also purport to have been written by rulers There were almost certainly more such collections as statements of other rulers suggest the custom was widespread 10 The similarities between these law collections make it tempting to assume a consistent underlying legal system 10 As with the Code of Hammurabi however it is difficult to interpret the purpose and underlying legal systems of these earlier collections prompting numerous scholars to question whether this should be attempted 11 Extant collections include The Code of Ur Nammu of Ur The Code of Lipit Ishtar of Isin The Laws of Eshnunna written by Bilalama or by Dadusha Another collection which Martha Roth calls the Laws of X 12 but which may simply be the end of the Code of Ur Nammu 13 There are additionally thousands of documents from the practice of law from before and during the Old Babylonian period These documents include contracts judicial rulings letters on legal cases and reform documents such as that of Urukagina king of Lagash in the mid 3rd millennium BC whose reforms combatted corruption Mesopotamia has the most comprehensive surviving legal corpus from before the Digest of Justinian even compared to those from ancient Greece and Rome 14 Copies EditLouvre stele Edit The excavation of the Susa acropolis in 1897 1898 four years before the Code was found at the site The Royal City left and Acropolis right of Susa in 2007 The first copy of the text found and still the most complete is on a 2 25 m 7 ft 4 1 2 in stele The stele is now displayed on the ground floor of the Louvre in Room 227 of the Richelieu wing 15 At the top is an image of Hammurabi with Shamash the Babylonian sun god and god of justice Below the image are about 4 130 lines of cuneiform text One fifth contain a prologue and epilogue while the remaining four fifths contain what are generally called the laws 16 Near the bottom seven columns of the laws each with more than eighty lines were polished and erased in antiquity 17 The stele was found in three large fragments and reconstructed 18 It is 225 cm 7 ft 4 1 2 in high with a circumference is 165 cm 5 ft 5 in at the summit and 190 cm 6 ft 3 in at the base 18 Hammurabi s image is 65 cm 2 ft 1 1 2 in high and 60 cm 1 ft 11 1 2 in wide 18 The Louvre stele was found at the site of the ancient Elamite city of Susa Susa is in modern day Khuzestan Province Iran Persia at the time of excavation The stele was excavated by the French Archaeological Mission under the direction of Jacques de Morgan 19 Father Jean Vincent Scheil published the initial report in the fourth volume of the Reports of the Delegation to Persia Memoires de la Delegation en Perse According to Scheil the stele s fragments were found on the tell of the Susa acropolis l Acropole de Suse between December 1901 and January 1902 18 The few large fragments made assembly easy 18 Scheil hypothesised that the stele had been taken to Susa by the Elamite king Shutruk Nakhunte and that he had commissioned the erasure of several columns of laws to write his legend there 18 It has been proposed that the relief portion of the stele especially the beards of Hammurabi and Shamash was reworked at the same time 20 Roth suggests the stele was taken as plunder from Sippar 21 where Hammurabi lived towards the end of his reign 22 Other copies Edit Fragments of a second and possibly third stele recording the Code were found along with the Louvre stele at Susa 23 Over fifty manuscripts containing the laws are known They were found not only in Susa but also in Babylon Nineveh Assur Borsippa Nippur Sippar Ur Larsa and more 24 Copies were created during Hammurabi s reign and also after it since the text became a part of the scribal curriculum 25 Copies have been found dating from one thousand years after the stele s creation 17 and a catalogue from the library of Neo Assyrian king Ashurbanipal 685 631 BC lists a copy of the judgments of Hammurabi 26 The additional copies fill in most of the stele s original text including much of the erased section 17 Early scholarship Edit Father Jean Vincent Scheil first modern editor of the CodeThe editio princeps of the Code was published by Father Jean Vincent Scheil in 1902 27 in the fourth volume of the Reports of the Delegation to Persia Memoires de la Delegation en Perse After a brief introduction with details of the excavation 28 Scheil gave a transliteration and a free translation into French 29 as well as a selection of images 30 Editions in other languages soon followed in German by Hugo Winckler in 1902 31 in English by C H W Johns in 1903 32 and in Italian by Pietro Bonfante also in 1903 33 The Code was thought to be the earliest Mesopotamian law collection when it was rediscovered in 1902 for example C H W Johns 1903 book was titled The Oldest Code of Laws in the World 32 The English writer H G Wells included Hammurabi in the first volume of The Outline of History and to Wells too the Code was the earliest known code of law 34 However three earlier collections were rediscovered afterwards the Code of Lipit Ishtar in 1947 the Laws of Eshnunna in 1948 and the Code of Ur Nammu in 1952 35 Early commentators dated Hammurabi and the stele to the 23rd century BC 36 However this is an earlier estimate than even the ultra long chronology would support The Code was compiled near the end of Hammurabi s reign 37 This was deduced partly from the list of his achievements in the prologue 38 Scheil enthused about the stele s importance and perceived fairness calling it a moral and political masterpiece 18 C H W Johns called it one of the most important monuments in the history of the human race 39 He remarked that there are many humanitarian clauses and much protection is given the weak and the helpless 40 and even lauded a wonderful modernity of spirit 41 John Dyneley Prince called the Code s rediscovery the most important event which has taken place in the development of Assyriological science since the days of Rawlinson and Layard 42 Charles Francis Horne commended the wise law giver and his celebrated code 43 James Henry Breasted noted the Code s justice to the widow the orphan and the poor but remarked that it also allows many of the old and naive ideas of justice to stand 44 Commentators praised the advanced society they believed the Code evinced 45 Several singled out perceived secularism Owen Jenkins 46 for example but even Charles Souvay for the Catholic Encyclopedia who opined that unlike the Mosaic Law the Code was founded upon the dictates of reason 27 The question of the Code s influence on the Mosaic Law received much early attention 47 Scholars also identified Hammurabi with the Biblical figure Amraphel 48 but this proposal has since been abandoned 49 Frame EditRelief Edit The relief on the Louvre steleThe relief appears to show Hammurabi standing before a seated Shamash 23 Shamash wears the horned crown of divinity 50 and has a solar attribute flames 51 spouting from his shoulders 52 Contrastingly Scheil in his editio princeps 27 identified the seated figure as Hammurabi and the standing figure as Shamash 18 Scheil also held that the scene showed Shamash dictating to Hammurabi while Hammurabi held a scribe s stylus gazing attentively at the god 18 Martha Roth lists other interpretations that the king is offering the laws to the god that the king is accepting or offering the emblems of sovereignty of the rod and ring or most probably that these emblems are the measuring tools of the rod measure and rope measure used in temple building 53 Hammurabi may even be imitating Shamash 54 It is certain though that the draughtsman showed Hammurabi s close links to the divine realm 55 using composition and iconography 56 Prologue Edit The prologue and epilogue together occupy one fifth of the text Out of around 4 130 lines the prologue occupies 300 lines and the epilogue occupies 500 16 They are in ring composition around the laws though there is no visual break distinguishing them from the laws 57 Both are written in poetic style 58 and as William W Davies wrote contain much which sounds very like braggadocio 59 The 300 line prologue begins with an etiology of Hammurabi s royal authority 1 49 Anum the Babylonian sky god and king of the gods granted rulership over humanity to Marduk Marduk chose the centre of his earthly power to be Babylon which in the real world worshipped him as its tutelary god Marduk established the office of kingship within Babylon Finally Anum along with the Babylonian wind god Enlil chose Hammurabi to be Babylon s king Hammurabi was to rule to prevent the strong from oppressing the weak 37 39 dannum ensam ana la ḫabalim He was to rise like Shamash over the Mesopotamians the ṣalmat qaqqadim literally the black headed people and illuminate the land 40 44 60 note 1 Hammurabi then lists his achievements and virtues 50 291 These are expressed in noun form in the Akkadian first person singular nominal sentence construction noun anaku I am noun 61 The first nominal sentence 50 53 is short I am Hammurabi the shepherd selected by the god Enlil ḫammurabi re um nibit enlil anaku Then Hammurabi continues for over 200 lines in a single nominal sentence with the anaku delayed to the very end 291 62 note 1 Hammurabi repeatedly calls himself na dum pious lines 61 149 241 and 272 The metaphor of Hammurabi as his people s shepherd also recurs It was a common metaphor for ancient Near Eastern kings but is perhaps justified by Hammurabi s interest in his subjects affairs 63 His affinities with many different gods are stressed throughout He is portrayed as dutiful in restoring and maintaining temples and peerless on the battlefield The list of his accomplishments has helped establish that the text was written late in Hammurabi s reign After the list Hammurabi explains that he fulfilled Marduk s request to establish truth and justice kittam u misaram for the people 292 302 although the prologue never directly references the laws 64 The prologue ends at that time 303 inumisu and the laws begin 65 note 1 Epilogue Edit Ea Enki god of wisdom whom Hammurabi implores to confuse any defacer of his stele depicted on a cylinder seal c 2300 BCUnlike the prologue the 500 line epilogue is explicitly related to the laws 64 The epilogue begins 3144 3151 these are the just decisions which Hammurabi has established dinat misarim sa ḫammurabi ukinnu ma He exalts his laws and his magnanimity 3152 3239 66 He then expresses a hope that any wronged man who has a lawsuit awilum ḫablum sa awatam irassu may have the laws of the stele read aloud to him and know his rights 3240 3256 67 This would bring Hammurabi praise 3257 3275 and divine favour 3276 3295 68 Hammurabi wishes for good fortune for any ruler who heeds his pronouncements and respects his stele 3296 3359 69 However he invokes the wrath of the gods on any man who disobeys or erases his pronouncements 3360 3641 the end of the text 70 note 1 The epilogue contains much legal imagery and the phrase to prevent the strong from oppressing the weak 3202 3203 dannum ensam ana la ḫabalim 71 is reused from the prologue However the king s main concern appears to be ensuring that his achievements are not forgotten and his name not sullied 72 The list of curses heaped upon any future defacer is 281 lines long and extremely forceful Some of the curses are very vivid may the god Sin decree for him a life that is no better than death 3486 3508 sin balaṭam sa itti mutim sitannu ana simtim lisimsum 73 may he the future defacer conclude every day month and year of his reign with groaning and mourning 3497 3501 umi warḫi sanat palesu ina taneḫim u dimmatim lisaqti 73 may he experience the spilling of his life force like water 3435 3436 tabak napistisu kima me 74 Hammurabi implores a variety of gods individually to turn their particular attributes against the defacer For example may the storm god Adad deprive him of the benefits of rain from heaven and flood from the springs 3509 3515 adad zunni ina same milam ina nagbim liṭersu 73 may the god of wisdom Ea deprive him of all understanding and wisdom and may he lead him into confusion 3440 3451 ea uznam u nemeqam liṭersu ma ina misitim littarrusu 74 note 1 Gods and goddesses are invoked in this order 70 Anum 3387 3394 Enlil 3395 3422 Ninlil 3423 3439 Ea 3440 3458 Shamash 3459 3485 Sin 3486 3508 Adad 3509 3525 Zababa 3526 3536 Ishtar 3537 3573 Nergal 3574 3589 Nintu 3590 3599 Ninkarrak 3600 3619 All the gods 3620 3635 Enlil a second time 3636 3641 Laws EditThe Code of Hammurabi is the longest and best organised legal text from the ancient Near East 75 as well as the best preserved 76 The classification below columns 1 3 is Driver amp Miles 77 with several amendments and Roth s translation is used 78 Laws represented by letters are those reconstructed primarily from documents other than the Louvre stele Legal areas covered in the Code of Hammurabi along with specific provisions and examples Legal area Laws Specific provisions Example English Example Akkadian Offences against the administration of law 1 5 false charges 1 2 false testimony 3 4 falsification of judgement 5 If a man accuses another man and charges him with homicide but cannot bring proof against him his accuser shall be killed 1 79 summa awilum awilam ubbir ma nertam elisu iddi ma la uktinsu mubbirsu iddak 1 Property offences 6 25 stealing and receiving stolen property 6 13 kidnapping 14 harbouring fugitive slaves 15 20 breaking and entering 21 burglary 22 24 looting burning houses 25 If a man breaks into a house they shall kill him and hang him in front of that very breach 21 80 summa awilum bitam iplus ina pani pilsim suati idukkusu ma iḫallalusu 21 Land and houses 26 k tenure of fiefs 26 41 duties of farmers 42 48 debts of farmers 49 52 irrigation offences 53 56 cattle trespass 57 58 cutting down trees 59 care of date orchards 60 a offences connected with houses b k If a man has a debt lodged against him and the storm god Adad devastates his field or a flood sweeps away the crops or there is no grain grown in the field due to insufficient water in that year he will not repay grain to his creditor he shall suspend performance of his contract literally wet his clay tablet and he will not give interest payments for that year 48 81 summa awilum ḫubullum elisu ibassi ma eqelsu adad irtaḫiṣ u lu bibbulum itbal u lu ina la me se um ina eqlim la ittabsi ina sattim suati se am ana bel ḫubullisu ul utar ṭuppasu uraṭṭab u ṣibtam sa sattim suati ul inaddin 48 Commerce l 126 loans and trade l 107 innkeeping 108 111 fraud by couriers 112 distraint and pledge of persons for debt 113 119 safe custody or deposit 120 126 If a merchant should give silver to a trading agent for an investment venture and he the trading agent incurs a loss on his journeys he shall return silver to the merchant in the amount of the capital sum 102 82 summa tamkarum ana samallim kaspam ana tadmiqtim ittadin ma asar illiku bitiqtam itamar qaqqad kaspim ana tamkarim utar 102 Marriage family and property 127 194 slander of ugbabtum priestesses or married women 127 definition of married woman 128 adultery 129 132 remarriage in husbands absence 133 136 divorce 137 143 marriage to naditum women 144 147 maintenance of sick wives 148 149 gifts from husbands to wives 150 liability of spouses for debt 151 152 murder of husbands 153 incest 154 158 inchoate marriage 159 161 devolution of marriage gifts after wives deaths 162 164 gifts to sons inter vivos 165 succession amongst sons 166 167 disinheritance of sons 168 169 legitimation 170 widows property 171 174 marriage of awilum class women to slaves 175 176 remarriage of widows 177 sacral women 178 184 adoption and nursing of infants 185 194 If a man takes in adoption a young child at birth literally in its water and then rears him that rearling will not be reclaimed 185 83 summa awilum ṣeḫram ina mesu ana marutim ilqe ma urtabbisu tarbitum si ul ibbaqqar 185 Assault 195 214 assaults on fathers 195 assaults on awilum class men 196 208 assaults causing miscarriage 209 214 If an awilum should blind the eye of another awilum they shall blind his eye 196 84 summa awilum in mar awilim uḫtappid insu uḫappadu 196 Professional men 215 240 surgeons 215 223 veterinary surgeons 224 225 barbers 226 227 builders 228 233 shipbuilders and boatmen 234 240 If a builder constructs a house for a man but does not make it conform to specifications so that a wall then buckles that builder shall make that wall sound using his own silver 233 85 summa itinnum bitam ana awilim ipus ma sipirsu la usteṣbi ma igarum iqtup itinnum su ina kasap ramanisu igaram suati udannan 233 Agriculture 241 273 oxen 241 252 theft of fodder by tenants 253 256 hire of agricultural labourers 257 258 theft of agricultural implements 259 260 hire of herdsmen 261 duties of shepherds 262 267 hire of beasts and wagons 268 272 hire of seasonal labourers 273 If an ox gores to death a man while it is passing through the streets that case has no basis for a claim 250 86 summa alpum suqam ina alakisu awilam ikkip ma ustamit dinum su rugummam ul isu 250 Rates of hire 274 277 wages of craftsmen 274 hire of boats 275 277 If a man rents a boat of 60 kur capacity he shall give one sixth of a shekel of silver per day as its hire 277 87 summa awilum elep susim igur ina umim isten sudus kaspam idisa inaddin 277 Slaves 278 282 warranties on sale of slaves 278 279 purchase of slaves abroad 280 281 denial of mastership 282 If a slave should declare to his master You are not my master he the master shall bring charge and proof against him that he is indeed his slave and his master shall cut off his ear 281 87 summa wardum ana belisu ul beli atta iqtabi kima warassu ukansu ma belsu uzunsu inakkis 281 Theories of purpose EditThe purpose and legal authority of the Code have been disputed since the mid 20th century 88 Theories fall into three main categories that it is legislation whether a code of law or a body of statutes that it is a sort of law report containing records of past cases and judgments and that it is an abstract work of jurisprudence The jurisprudence theory has gained much support within Assyriology 89 Legislation Edit Justinian I of Byzantium L and Napoleon Bonaparte of France R both created legal codes to which the Louvre stele has been compared The term code presupposes that the document was intended to be enforced as legislation It was used by Scheil in his editio princeps 90 and widely adopted afterwards C H W Johns one of the most prolific early commentators on the document proclaimed that the Code well deserves its name 41 Recent Assyriologists have used the term without comment 91 as well as scholars outside Assyriology 92 However only if the text was intended as enforced legislation can it truly be called a code of law and its provisions laws The document on first inspection resembles a highly organised code similar to the Code of Justinian and the Napoleonic Code 93 There is also evidence that dinatum which in the Code of Hammurabi sometimes denote individual laws were enforced 94 One copy of the Code calls it a ṣimdat sarrim royal decree which denotes a kind of enforced legislation 95 However the arguments against this view are strong Firstly it would make a very unusual code Reuven Yaron called the designation Code a persistent misnomer 96 Vital areas of society and commerce are omitted 97 For example Marc Van De Mieroop observes that the Code deals with cattle and agricultural fields but it almost entirely ignores the work of shepherds vital to Babylonia s economy 98 Then against the legislation theory more generally highly implausible circumstances are covered such as threshing with goats animals far too unruly for the task law 270 99 The laws are also strictly casuistic if then unlike in the Mosaic Law there are no apodictic laws general commands These would more obviously suggest prescriptive legislation The strongest argument against the legislation theory however is that most judges appear to have paid the Code no attention This line of criticism originated with Benno Landsberger in 1950 88 No Mesopotamian legal document explicitly references the Code or any other law collection 93 despite the great scale of the corpus 100 Two references to prescriptions on a stele naru 101 come closest In contrast numerous judgments cite royal misarum decrees 93 Raymond Westbrook held that this strengthened the argument from silence that ancient Near Eastern legal codes had legal import 102 Furthermore many Old Babylonian judgments run entirely counter to the Code s prescriptions 103 Law report Edit A British Museum display of tablets from the Library of Ashurbanipal The Library lists a copy of the judgments of Hammurabi over a millennium after Hammurabi s death A second theory is that the Code is a sort of law report and as such contains records of past cases and judgments albeit phrased abstractly This would provide one explanation for the casuistic format of the laws indeed Jean Bottero believed he had found a record of a case that inspired one 104 However such finds are inconclusive and very rare despite the scale of the Mesopotamian legal corpus 105 Furthermore legal judgments were frequently recorded in Mesopotamia and they recount the facts of the case without generalising them 106 These judgments were concerned almost exclusively with points of fact prompting Martha Roth to comment I know of only one case out of thousands extant that might be said to revolve around a point of law 107 Jurisprudence Edit A third theory which has gained traction within Assyriology is that the Code is not a true code but an abstract treatise on how judgments should be formulated This led Fritz Rudolf Kraus in an early formulation of the theory to call it jurisprudence Rechtsspruche 108 Kraus proposed that it was a work of Mesopotamian scholarship in the same category as omen collections like summa alu and ana ittisu 108 Others have provided their own versions of this theory 109 A Leo Oppenheim remarked that the Code of Hammurabi and similar Mesopotamian law collections represent an interesting formulation of social criticism and should not be taken as normative directions 110 This interpretation bypasses the problem of low congruence between the Code and actual legal judgments Secondly the Code does bear striking similarities to other works of Mesopotamian scholarship Key points of similarity are the list format and the order of the items 111 which Ann Guinan describes as a complex serial logic 112 Marc Van De Mieroop explains that in common with other works of Mesopotamian scholarship such as omen lists king lists and god lists the entries of the Code of Hammurabi are arranged according to two principles These are opposition whereby a variable in one entry is altered to make another entry and pointillism whereby new conditions are added to an entry or paradigmatic series pursued to generate a sequence 113 Van De Mieroop provides the following examples If a physician performs major surgery with a bronze lancet upon an awilum and thus heals the awilum or opens an awilum s temple with a bronze lancet and thus heals the awilum s eye he shall take ten shekels of silver as his fee Law 215 114 If a physician performs major surgery with a bronze lancet upon an awilum and thus causes the awilum s death or opens an awilum s temple with a bronze lancet and thus blinds the awilum s eye they shall cut off his hand Law 218 114 Laws 215 and 218 illustrate the principle of opposition one variable of the first law the outcome of the operations is altered to create the second 115 If there is either a soldier or an auxiliary who is taken captive while serving in a royal fortress if he should return and get back to his city they shall return to him his field and orchard and he himself shall perform his service obligation If there is either a soldier or an auxiliary who is taken captive in a royal fortress and his son is able to perform the service obligation the field and orchard shall be given to him and he shall perform his father s service obligation If his son is young and is unable to perform his father s service obligation one third of the field and orchard shall be given to his mother and his mother shall raise him Laws 27 29 116 Here following the principle of pointillism circumstances are added to the first entry to create more entries 117 Pointillism also lets list entries be generated by following paradigmatic series common to multiple branches of scholarship It can thus explain the implausible entries For example in the case of the goat used for threshing law 270 118 the previous laws concern other animals that were used for threshing The established series of domesticated beasts dictated that a goat come next 119 Wolfram von Soden who decades earlier called this way of thinking Listenwissenschaft list science 120 often denigrated it 121 However more recent writers such as Marc Van De Mieroop Jean Bottero and Ann Guinan have either avoided value judgments or expressed admiration Lists were central to Mesopotamian science and logic and their distinctive structural principles let entries be generated infinitely 119 Linking the Code to the scribal tradition within which list science emerged also explains why trainee scribes copied and studied it for over a millennium 24 The Code appears in a late Babylonian 7th 6th century BC list of literary and scholarly texts 122 No other law collection became so entrenched in the curriculum 123 Rather than a code of laws then it may be a scholarly treatise 101 Much has been written on what the Code suggests about Old Babylonian society and its legal system failed verification For example whether it demonstrates that there were no professional advocates 124 or that there were professional judges 125 Scholars who approach the Code as a self contained document renounce such claims 126 Underlying principles EditOne principle widely accepted to underlie the Code is lex talionis or eye for an eye Laws 196 and 200 respectively prescribe an eye for an eye and a tooth for a tooth when one man destroys another s Punishments determined by lex talionis could be transferred to the sons of the wrongdoer 124 For example law 229 states that the death of a homeowner in a house collapse necessitates the death of the house s builder The following law 230 states that if the homeowner s son died the builder s son must die also 85 Persons were not equal before the law not just age and profession but also class and gender dictated the punishment or remedy they received Three main kinds of person awilum muskenum and wardum male amtum female are mentioned throughout the Code A wardum amtum was a male female slave As for awilum and muskenum though contentious it seems likely that the difference was one of social class with awilum meaning something like gentleman and muskenum something like commoner 127 The penalties were not necessarily stricter for a muskenum than an awilum a muskenum s life may have been cheaper but so were some of his fines 128 There was also inequality within these classes laws 200 and 202 for example show that one awilum could be of higher rank than another 129 Martha Roth has shown how that ideas of shame and honour motivated certain laws 130 The above principles are distant in spirit from modern systems of common and civil law but some may be more familiar One such principle is the presumption of innocence the first two laws of the stele prescribe punishments determined by lex talionis for unsubstantiated accusations Written evidence was valued highly 131 especially in matters of contract 43 One crime was given only one punishment 132 The laws also recognized the importance of the intentions of a defendant 124 Lastly the Code s establishment on public stelae was supposedly intended to increase access to justice Whether or not this was true suggesting that a wronged man have the stele read aloud to him lines 3240 3254 note 1 is a concrete measure in this direction given the inaccessibility of scribal education in the Old Babylonian period 133 The prologue asserts that Hammurabi was chosen by the gods Raymond Westbrook observed that in ancient Near Eastern law the king was the primary source of legislation 134 However they could delegate their god given legal authority to judges 135 However as Owen B Jenkins observed the prescriptions themselves bear an astonishing absence of all theological or even ceremonial law 46 Language Edit The text The arrangement of the Code s cuneiform was antiquated when it was written The laws are written in the Old Babylonian dialect of Akkadian Their style is regular and repetitive and today they are a standard set text for introductory Akkadian classes 136 However as A Leo Oppenheim summarises the cuneiform signs themselves are vertically arranged within boxes placed in bands side by side from right to left an arrangement already antiquated by Hammurabi s time 137 The laws are expressed in casuistic format they are conditional sentences with the case detailed in the protasis if clause and the remedy given in the apodosis then clause The protasis begins summa if 138 except when it adds to circumstances already specified in a previous law e g laws 36 38 and 40 139 The preterite is used for simple past verbs in the protasis or possibly for a simple conditional 138 The perfect often appears at the end of the protasis after one or more preterites to convey sequence of action or possibly a hypothetical conditional 138 The durative sometimes called the present in Assyriology may express intention in the laws 138 For ease of English reading some translations give preterite and perfect verbs in the protasis a present sense 140 In the apodosis the verbs are in the durative though the sense varies between permissive it is permitted that x happen and instructive x must will happen 141 In both protasis and apodosis sequence of action is conveyed by suffixing verbs with ma and 142 ma can also have the sense but 143 The Code is relatively well understood but some items of its vocabulary are controversial vague As mentioned the terms awilum and muskenum have proved difficult to translate They probably denote respectively a male member of a higher and lower social class 144 Wolfram von Soden in his Akkadisches Handworterbuch proposed that muskenum was derived from sukenum to bow down supplicate 145 As a word for a man of low social standing it has endured possibly from a Sumerian root into Arabic miskin Italian meschino Spanish mezquino and French mesquin 146 However some earlier translators also seeking to explain the muskenum s special treatment translated it as leper and even noble 147 Some translators have supplied stilted readings for awilum such as seignior 148 elite man 149 and member of the aristocracy 150 others have left it untranslated 151 Certain legal terms have also proved difficult to translate For example dinum and dittum can denote the law in general as well as individual laws verdicts divine pronouncements and other phenomena 152 misarum can likewise denote the law in general as well as a kind of royal decree 153 Relation to other law collections EditSee also List of ancient legal codes Other Mesopotamian Edit Prologue to the Code of Lipit IshtarThe Code of Hammurabi bears strong similarities to earlier Mesopotamian law collections Many purport to have been written by rulers and this tradition was probably widespread 10 Earlier law collections express their god given legitimacy similarly 154 Like the Code of Hammurabi they feature prologues and epilogues the Code of Ur Nammu has a prologue the Code of Lipit Ishtar a prologue and an epilogue and the Laws of Eshnunna an epilogue Also like the Code of Hammurabi they uphold the one crime one punishment principle 155 The cases covered and language used are overall strikingly similar 10 Scribes were still copying earlier law collections such as the Code of Ur Nammu when Hammurabi produced his own Code 156 This suggests that earlier collections may have not only resembled the Code but influenced it Raymond Westbrook maintained that there was a fairly consistent tradition of ancient Near Eastern law which included the Code of Hammurabi 157 and that this was largely customary law 158 Nonetheless there are differences for example Stephen Bertman has suggested that where earlier collections are concerned with compensating victims the Code is concerned with physically punishing offenders 159 Additionally the above conclusions of similarity and influence apply only to the law collections themselves The actual legal practices from the context of each code are mysterious 160 The Code of Hammurabi also bears strong similarities to later Mesopotamian law collections to the casuistic Middle Assyrian Laws and to the Neo Babylonian Laws 161 whose format is largely relative a man who It is easier to posit direct influence for these later collections given the Code s survival through the scribal curriculum 24 Lastly although influence is more difficult to trace there is evidence that the Hittite laws may have been part of the same tradition of legal writing outside Mesopotamia proper 162 Mosaic Graeco Roman and modern Edit Moses receiving the law on Mount Sinai depicted in the Byzantine Leo BibleThe relationship of the Code of Hammurabi to the Mosaic Law specifically the Covenant Code of Exodus 20 22 23 19 has been a subject of discussion since its discovery 47 Friedrich Delitzsch argued the case for strong influence in a 1902 lecture in one episode of the Babel und Bibel Babel and Bible or Panbabylonism debate on the influence of ancient Mesopotamian cultures on ancient Israel However he was met with strong resistance 163 There was cultural contact between Mesopotamia and the Levant and Middle Bronze Age tablets of casuistic cuneiform law have been found at Hazor 164 There are also similarities between the Code of Hamurabi and the Covenant Code in the casuistic format in principles such as lex talionis eye for an eye and in the content of the provisions Some similarities are striking such as in the provisions concerning a man goring ox Code of Hammurabi laws 250 252 86 Exodus 21 28 32 165 Certain writers have posited direct influence David P Wright for example asserts that the Covenant Code is directly primarily and throughout dependent upon the Laws of Hammurabi a creative rewriting of Mesopotamian sources to be viewed as an academic abstraction rather than a digest of laws 166 Others who posit indirect influence such as via Aramaic or Phoenician intermediaries 167 The consensus however is that the similarities are a result of inheriting common traditions 168 In 1916 George A Barton cited a similarity of antecedents and of general intellectual outlook 169 More recently David Winton Thomas has stated There is no ground for assuming any direct borrowing by the Hebrew from the Babylonian Even where the two sets of laws differ little in the letter they differ much in the spirit 170 The influence of the Code of Hammurabi on later law collections is difficult to establish Marc Van De Mieroop suggests that it may have influenced the Greek Gortyn Code and the Roman Twelve Tables 171 However even Van De Mieroop acknowledges that most Roman law is not similar to the Code or likely to have been influenced by it 172 Knowing the Code s influence on modern law requires knowing its influence on Mosaic and Graeco Roman law Since this is contentious commentators have restricted themselves to observing similarities and differences between the Code and e g United States law and medieval law 173 Some who have remarked that the punishments found in the Code are no more severe and in some cases less so 174 needs update Law 238 stipulates that a sea captain ship manager or ship charterer that saved a ship from total loss was only required to pay one half the value of the ship to the ship owner 175 176 177 In the Digesta seu Pandectae 533 the second volume of the codification of laws ordered by Justinian I 527 565 of the Eastern Roman Empire a legal opinion written by the Roman jurist Paulus at the beginning of the Crisis of the Third Century in 235 AD was included about the Lex Rhodia Rhodian law that articulates the general average principle of marine insurance established on the island of Rhodes in approximately 1000 to 800 BC as a member of the Doric Hexapolis plausibly by the Phoenicians during the proposed Dorian invasion and emergence of the purported Sea Peoples during the Greek Dark Ages c 1100 c 750 that led to the proliferation of the Doric Greek dialect 178 179 180 The law of general average constitutes the fundamental principle that underlies all insurance 179 better source needed Reception outside Assyriology Edit The relief portrait of Hammurabi in the U S Capitol by Thomas Hudson JonesThe Code is often referred to in legal scholarship where its provisions are assumed to be laws and the document is assumed to be a true code of laws This is also true outside academia 181 original research Hammurabi leads Babylon in five of the six Civilization video games 182 There is a relief portrait of Hammurabi over the doors to the House Chamber of the U S Capitol along with portraits of 22 others noted for their work in establishing the principles that underlie American law 183 There are replicas of the Louvre stele in institutions around the world citation needed including the Headquarters of the United Nations in New York City 184 and the Peace Palace in The Hague seat of the International Court of Justice 185 See also EditHistory of institutions in MesopotamiaReferences EditNotes Edit a b c d e f CDLI 2019 s line numbering Roth 1995a s translation The line numbers may seem low since the CDLI edition does not include sections not found on the Louvre stele Citations Edit Sasson Jack Civilizations of the Ancient Near East Hendrickson pp 901 908 ISBN 0684192799 Ross Leslie Art and Architecture of the World s Religions Greenwood Press p 35 Renger 2020 Van De Mieroop 2007 pp 92 93 Van De Mieroop 2007 pp 100 104 Driver amp Miles 1952 p 52 Van De Mieroop 2007 pp 111 113 Van De Mieroop 2007 pp 111 113 Driver amp Miles 1952 p 36 Driver amp Miles 1952 p 37 a b c d Driver amp Miles 1952 p 9 Kraus 1960 pp 295 296 Bottero 1992 p 181 Roth 1995b p 13 Roth 1995a pp 36 39 Roth 1995a p 36 Driver amp Miles 1952 pp 56 57 Louvre n d a b Roth 1995b pp 15 16 a b c Roth 1995a p 74 a b c d e f g h i Scheil 1902 p 12 Roth 1995b pp 23 24 Ornan Tallay Unfinished Business the Relief on the Hammurabi Louvre Stele Revisited Journal of Cuneiform Studies vol 71 pp 85 109 2019 Roth 1995b pp 21 22 Driver amp Miles 1952 pp 29 30 a b Roth 1995a p 73 a b c Roth 1995b p 20 Driver amp Miles 1952 pp 25 56 Van De Mieroop 2016 p 145 Van De Mieroop 2016 p 147 a b c Souvay 1910 Scheil 1902 pp 11 12 Scheil 1902 pp 13 162 Scheil 1902 plates 3 15 Winckler 1902 a b Johns 1903a Bonfante 1903 Wells 1920 p 245 Kramer 1988 pp 51 52 Johns 1903b p 257 Harper 1904 the title Equitable Trust Company 1910 the title Driver amp Miles 1952 p 34ff Roth 1995a p 71 Finkelstein 1961 p 101 Johns 1903a p v Johns 1904 p 68 a b Johns 1903b p 258 Prince 1904 p 601 a b Horne 1915 Breasted 1916 p 131 Johns 1903b p 257 Souvay 1910 Everts 1920 p 45 a b Jenkins 1905 p 335 a b Sampey 1904a Sampey 1904b Davies 1905 Johns 1914 Everts 1920 Edwards 1921 Johns 1903a pp v vi Prince 1904 pp 601 602 Souvay 1910 North 1993 p 5 Van Buren 1943 Black amp Green 1998 pp 102 103 Slanski 2012 p 106 Black amp Green 1998 p 183 Breasted 1916 p 132 Roth 1995b pp 22 23 Charpin 2010 pp 81 82 Roth 1995b p 23 Elsen Novak amp Novak 2006 pp 148 149 Roth 1995b p 16 Huehnergard 2011 p 160 Davies 1905 p 15 Roth 1995a pp 76 77 Huehnergard 2011 pp 11 12 Roth 1995a pp 77 80 Van De Mieroop 2005 p 82 a b Driver amp Miles 1952 pp 40 41 Roth 1995a pp 80 81 Roth 1995a pp 133 134 Roth 1995a p 134 Roth 1995a pp 134 135 Roth 1995a pp 135 136 a b Roth 1995a pp 136 140 Roth 1995a p 133 Driver amp Miles 1952 p 37 Bottero 1992 p 167 a b c Roth 1995a p 138 a b Roth 1995a p 137 Roth 1995a p 71 Van De Mieroop 2016 p 144 Driver amp Miles 1952 pp 43 45 Roth 1995a pp 76 142 Roth 1995a p 81 Roth 1995a p 85 Roth 1995a p 90 Roth 1995a p 100 Roth 1995a p 119 Roth 1995a p 121 a b Roth 1995a p 125 a b Roth 1995a p 128 a b Roth 1995a p 132 a b Kraus 1960 p 292 Kraus 1960 Oppenheim 1977 Bottero 1992 chapter 10 Van De Mieroop 2016 chapters 6 7 Souvay 1910 Kraus 1960 p 283 Pfeifer 2011 Rositani 2017 Alkadry 2002 2003 Pearn 2016 a b c Van De Mieroop 2016 p 170 Oppenheim amp Reiner 1959 pp 150 153 Bottero 1992 pp 180 181 Yaron 2013 p 580 Driver amp Miles 1952 pp 45ff Bottero 1992 p 161 Van De Mieroop 2016 p 165 Van De Mieroop 2016 p 167 Roth 1995a p 130 Van De Mieroop 2016 p 172 a b Van De Mieroop 2016 p 173 Westbrook 2003 p 19 Oppenheim 1977 p 211 Bottero 1992 pp 163 164 Roth 1995a pp 5 6 Bottero 1992 pp 171 172 Bottero 1992 pp 163 164 Roth 2001 Klein 2007 Roth 2001 p 255 a b Kraus 1960 p 288 Saggs 1965 pp 80ff Oppenheim 1977 p 287 Bottero 1992 pp 166 167 Van De Mieroop 2016 chapters 6 7 Oppenheim 1977 p 158 Bottero 1992 pp 173ff Van De Mieroop 2016 pp 165ff Guinan 2014 p 115 Van De Mieroop 2016 pp 165ff a b Roth 1995a p 123 Van De Mieroop 2016 p 166 Roth 1995a p 86 Van De Mieroop 2016 pp 166 167 Roth 1995a p 130 a b Van De Mieroop 2016 p 167 von Soden 1936 von Soden 1936 von Soden 1994 pp 146 158 Van De Mieroop 2016 p 175 Charpin 2010 p 81 a b c Johns 1911 Charpin 2010 p 52 Kraus 1960 pp 295 296 Roth 1995b pp 13ff Roth 1995a pp 72 73 Jenkins 1905 p 339 Roth 1995b pp 34ff Roth 1995a p 121 Roth 1995b pp 25ff Johns 1911 Roth 1995a p 72 Prince 1904 p 607 George 2005 p 7 Westbrook 2003 p 26 Bottero 1992 p 165 Richardson 2004 p 7 Oppenheim 1977 p 240 a b c d Roth 1995a p 8 Roth 1995a p 88 Roth 1995a Van De Mieroop 2016 chapters 6 7 Roth 1995a pp 7 8 Huehnergard 2011 pp 49 50 Huehnergard 2011 p 50 Roth 1995a pp 8 9 von Soden 1972 p 684 Wohl 1968 p 6 Johns 1914 p 76 Meek 1958 pp 139ff Van De Mieroop 2016 Bottero 1992 p 166 Roth 1995a pp 76ff Kraus 1960 p 285 Roth 1995b p 20 Charpin 2010 p 72 Kraus 1960 p 294 Finkelstein 1961 Charpin 2010 p 72 Driver amp Miles 1952 p 5 Van De Mieroop 2016 p 161 Van De Mieroop 2016 pp 144 145 Westbrook 2003 pp 4ff Westbrook 2003 p 21 Bertman 2003 p 71 Kraus 1960 pp 295 296 Roth 1995b p 13 Roth 1995a p 145 Roth 1995b p 19 Ziolkowski 2012 p 25 Horowitz Oshima amp Vukosavovic 2012 Wright 2009 chapter 8 Wright 2009 p 3 Van De Mieroop 2016 p 152 Wright 2009 p vii Barton 1916 p 340 Thomas 1958 p 28 Van De Mieroop 2016 pp 152 153 Van De Mieroop 2016 pp 153 154 Equitable Trust Company 1910 Jenkins 1905 Driver amp Miles 1952 p 57 Van De Mieroop 2016 p 154 Johns 1903b p 258 Driver amp Miles 1952 p 57 Hammurabi 1903 Translated by Sommer Otto Code of Hammurabi King of Babylon Records of the Past Washington DC Records of the Past Exploration Society 2 3 86 Retrieved 20 June 2021 238 If a skipper wrecks money to its owner Hammurabi 1904 Code of Hammurabi King of Babylon PDF Liberty Fund Translated by Harper Robert Francis 2nd ed Chicago University of Chicago Press p 85 Archived PDF from the original on 13 June 2021 Retrieved 20 June 2021 238 If a boatman sink one half its value Hammurabi 1910 Code of Hammurabi King of Babylon Avalon Project Translated by King Leonard William New Haven CT Yale Law School Archived from the original on 10 May 2021 Retrieved 20 June 2021 238 If a sailor wreck its value in money The Civil Law Volume I The Opinions of Julius Paulus Book II Constitution org Translated by Scott S P Central Trust Company 1932 Archived from the original on 24 June 2021 Retrieved 16 June 2021 TITLE VII ON THE LEX RHODIA It is provided by the Lex Rhodia that if merchandise is thrown overboard for the purpose of lightening a ship the loss is made good by the assessment of all which is made for the benefit of all a b The Documentary History of Insurance 1000 B C 1875 A D Newark NJ Prudential Press 1915 pp 5 6 Retrieved 15 June 2021 Duhaime s Timetable of World Legal History Duhaime s Law Dictionary Archived from 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September 2021 Retrieved 18 February 2021 Wright David P 2009 Inventing God s Law How the Covenant Code of the Bible Used and Revised the Laws of Hammurabi Oxford England Oxford University Press ISBN 9780195304756 Archived from the original on 7 March 2023 Retrieved 18 February 2021 Yaron Reuven 2013 Review Martha T Roth Law Collections from Mesopotamia and Asia Minor with a contribution by Harry A Hoffner Jr hg von Piotr Michalowski 2 Aufl Zeitschrift der Savigny Stiftung fur Rechtsgeschichte Romanistische Abteilung 116 1 580 582 doi 10 7767 zrgra 1999 116 1 580 S2CID 163878444 Archived from the original on 5 May 2021 Retrieved 6 May 2021 Ziolkowski Theodore 2012 Gilgamesh Among Us Modern Encounters with the Ancient Epic Ithaca NY Cornell University Press ISBN 9780801450358 Web Edit Architect of the Capitol n d Hammurabi Relief Portrait aoc gov Architect of the Capitol Archived from the original on 16 February 2021 Retrieved 17 February 2021 CDLI 10 December 2019 RIME 4 03 06 add21 Laws of Hammurapi composite cdli ucla edu Archived from the original on 8 January 2021 Retrieved 15 March 2021 Civilopedia n d Hammurabi civilopedia net Take Two Interactive Archived from the original on 26 September 2021 Retrieved 21 March 2021 Corban University n d Prewitt Allen Archaeological Museum corban edu Corban University Archived from the original on 11 February 2021 Retrieved 16 February 2021 Hammurabi Human Rights Organization n d Organization Definition hhro org Hammurabi Human Rights Organization Archived from the original on 27 February 2021 Retrieved 20 March 2021 International Court of Justice 29 April 2014 Unveiling of a stele bearing the Law Code of Hammurabi at the seat of the International Court of Justice PDF Press release International Court of Justice Archived PDF from the original on 7 August 2021 Retrieved 16 February 2021 Louvre n d Law Code of Hammurabi king of Babylon louvre fr Louvre Department of Near Eastern Antiquities Mesopotamia Archived from the original on 5 December 2020 Retrieved 16 February 2021 Majdfar Ali n d PERSIA the ANCIENT IRAN pbase com k amj Archived from the original on 15 September 2018 Retrieved 16 February 2021 Music amp NEW 2018 Miss Hammurabi Original Television Soundtrack music apple com Apple Music Archived from the original on 7 March 2023 Retrieved 20 March 2021 Nuclear Blast 2020 Titans of Creation music apple com Apple Music Archived from the original on 6 May 2021 Retrieved 6 May 2021 Oriental Institute n d Stele Cast oi db uchicago edu University of Chicago Oriental Institute Archived from the original on 28 September 2021 Retrieved 16 February 2021 Penn Museum n d Law Code of Hammurabi penn museum Penn Museum Archived from the original on 6 March 2021 Retrieved 16 February 2021 Rattini Kristin Baird 22 April 2019 Who was Hammurabi nationalgeographic com National Geographic Archived from the original on 12 August 2020 Retrieved 16 February 2021 Renger Johannes M 27 March 2020 Hammurabi Encyclopaedia Britannica online ed Encyclopaedia Britannica Archived from the original on 27 June 2015 Retrieved 6 May 2021 Scharping Nathaniel 1 December 2020 How the Ancient Code of Hammurabi Reveals a Society Both Similar and Alien to Ours discovermagazine com Discover Magazine Archived from the original on 25 January 2021 Retrieved 16 February 2021 Schwartz Amy E 15 April 1993 The Louvre and the Lawgiver The Washington Post Archived from the original on 7 March 2023 Retrieved 16 February 2021 Stark Julie McNeill Heather eds 2016 Newsletter PDF kumc edu Kansas City KS University of Kansas Medical Center Archived from the original PDF on 7 August 2021 United Nations n d Replica of The Codes of Hammurabi un org United Nations Archived from the original on 19 April 2022 Retrieved 16 February 2021 United Nations 1 August 1985 Gift of Iraq to the United Nations unmultimedia org United Nations Archived from the original on 10 May 2021 Retrieved 16 February 2021 Waymarking n d Code of Hammurabi Pergamon Museum Berlin Germany waymarking com Waymarking Archived from the original on 8 February 2021 Retrieved 16 February 2021 Mark Joshua J 24 June 2021 Code of Hammurabi World History Encyclopedia Archived from the original on 4 May 2023 Retrieved 4 May 2023 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Code of Hammurabi category Wikisource has original text related to this article Codex Hammurabi Wikiversity has learning resources about Hammurabi s Code CDLI s transliteration normalisation and translation Scheil s editio princeps in French King s translation Johns translation Harper s translation Wikisource The Louvre s page Portals Law Middle East Iraq Iran Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Code of Hammurabi amp oldid 1166609469, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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