Monday, November 14, 2016
Hammurabi\'s Code of Laws
King Hammurabi was the formula of Babylon from 1792 to 1750 B.C.E. Believing that he was bestowed with the pronouncement over Babylon by the get step up of Babylonian god, Marduk, Hammurabi saw it as his responsibility to protect the interests of his subjects by laying down a set of 282 laws that were believed to treat solely the different secernes of people in Babylon under a reproducible inscribe of evaluator, that would unify and unite the entire empire by setting a bench mark for honorable values and equating in classes. The law cypher is believed to have been presented to Hammurabi by the sunbathe god and god of justice, Shamash, in whose name Hammurabi fulfilled the moral responsibility imposed on him as a divinely installed monarch  (Hunt et al), by creating a system that would guarantee justice being delivered righteously, irrelevant of class or stature in society.\nThe law figure is in itself an insight into the time and destination of the Babylonian civili zation in the way that it lends a lense into the elements of class structure, gender roles, intolerance of thie genuinely or pretense and importance of receipts and contracts in the Babylonian society. The purpose of this writing is to develop upon these key elements by drawing examples from the law tag itself and elaborate on how the code is an illustration of the Babylonian culture. The very first of the key elements that stands taboo in Hammurabis Law calculate is the class structure. The code segregates the Babylonian society into three chief(preno minal) classes: the free persons, the commoners and the slaves. While the code boasts of providing justice to everyone equally and defend the weaker (or poorer) people against exploitation, the contrary seems to be true. For instance, the law If a low-spirited has knocked out the tooth of a composition that is his equal, his tooth shall be knocked out. If he has knocked out the tooth of a plebeian, he shall fee one-third of a mina of silver. In the stated law, the patricians ar the free people ...
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