Difference between revisions of "Hammurabi's Code reflected a change in law. What was that change?"

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==Basics of Hammurabi's Code==
 
==Basics of Hammurabi's Code==
  
The code was written around 1780 BC by King Hammurabi of Babylon, and it is one of the earliest sets of laws.  Hammurabi wrote the code to please the gods, and the punishments were more severe.  The laws were carved on an eight foot high piece of black diorite that was probably displayed in public for all to see.  The Law of Talon, or "eye for an eye" system, was created.  An example was if a house falls and kills the son of the owner, then the builder's son will be killed.  There were 282 laws dealing with theft, property damage, women's, marriage, children's, and slaves' rights, murder, death, and injury inscribed in the code.  The text was written in cuneiform and divided into a prologue, the 282 laws governing daily life in Babylon, and an epilogue.  Hammurabi's Code also regulated the organization of society.     
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The code was written around 1780 BC by King Hammurabi of Babylon, and it is one of the earliest sets of laws.  Hammurabi wrote the code to please the gods, and the punishments were more severe.  The laws were carved on an eight foot high piece of black diorite that was probably displayed in public for all to see.  The Law of Talon, or "eye for an eye" system, was created.  An example was if a house falls and kills the son of the owner, then the builder's son will be killed.  The code covered criminal and civil laws was divided into chapters, with family law the longest one.  There were 282 laws dealing with theft, property damage, murder, death, injury, and women's, marriage, children's, and slaves' rights inscribed in the code.  The text was written in cuneiform and divided into three parts - a prologue, the 282 laws governing daily life in Babylon, and an epilogue.  Hammurabi's Code also regulated the organization of society.     
  
 
==Images==
 
==Images==

Revision as of 22:09, 12 November 2011

*History 8 Mesopotamia Notes

Basics of Hammurabi's Code

The code was written around 1780 BC by King Hammurabi of Babylon, and it is one of the earliest sets of laws. Hammurabi wrote the code to please the gods, and the punishments were more severe. The laws were carved on an eight foot high piece of black diorite that was probably displayed in public for all to see. The Law of Talon, or "eye for an eye" system, was created. An example was if a house falls and kills the son of the owner, then the builder's son will be killed. The code covered criminal and civil laws was divided into chapters, with family law the longest one. There were 282 laws dealing with theft, property damage, murder, death, injury, and women's, marriage, children's, and slaves' rights inscribed in the code. The text was written in cuneiform and divided into three parts - a prologue, the 282 laws governing daily life in Babylon, and an epilogue. Hammurabi's Code also regulated the organization of society.

Images

x196image_52352_v2_m56577569830555817.jpg

x196image_50160_v2_m56577569831196385.jpg

hammurabi.jpg

Sources

http://www.wordiq.com/definition/Code_of_Hammurabi

http://www.fordham.edu/halsall/ancient/hamcode.asp

http://louvre.fr/llv/oeuvres/detail_notice.jsp?CONTENT%3C%3Ecnt_id=10134198673226487&CURRENT_LLV_NOTICE%3C%3Ecnt_id=10134198673226487&FOLDER%3C%3Efolder_id=9852723696500800&baseIndex=54&bmLocale=en

http://www.aoc.gov/cc/art/lawgivers/hammurabi.cfm