Commentary: Letters and inscriptions by Hammurabi code of King Babylonia, by Robert Francis Harper of about 2250, Hammurabi of King Babylonia; letters and inscriptions of Han Rabbi of King of Babylonia, L W. Kim; Die Gesetze Hammurabis, Babylonian of the King of Babylon, D H. Mueller; Tan Gerabze by Hugo Winckler, King of Babylonia
The Hammurabi Code is one of the earliest and most complete laws of the law, published by King Babylonian king Hammurabi, which was ruled from 1792 to 1750 BC. Hammurabi expanded Babylon City along the Euphrates River and unified the whole of Sodomia in South America. Hammurabi Code is a collection of 282 rules that sets standards for business interaction and sets fines and fines to meet judicial requirements. The Hammurabi code was carved into a black stone shaped tablet (pillar) in the form of a huge finger looted by an intruder and was finally rediscovered in 1901.
Hamarabi is best known for the establishment of a new Babylonian code: Hammurabi code. This is written in a stone tablet, a monument on a huge stone placed in a public place. The stone was later looted by Elamites and moved to the capital city Susa; it was rediscovered in 1901 and is currently in the Louvre museum in Paris. The Hammurabi code contains 282 laws written by 12 tablets. Unlike the previous law, it is written in Babylon's everyday language and can be read by any literate person in the city.
Art and culture (p.98) considers Hammurabi Code as King Code of Humphibi. Therefore, it differs greatly from the statutes that exist in the structure of our legal and authoritative government and social order. Hammurabi code - a "legal code" or a rich choice of options? As Mesopotamia wrote: The powerful king (p. 26), the code consists of 282 rules. These rules are extended to the beginning and end of the preface, and to the end. "Code" actually affects every part of everyday
In ancient times, the people of Mesopotamia lived under the rule of King Hamrabi of Babylon. Hammurabi enacted his laws and regulations, including 282 laws in 1750 BC. The stamp of Hamrabi is engraved on a stone and shows that the king accepted the law of the sun god Shamas. Laws and regulations encourage people to accept the authority of the king and the king attempts to give common rules to control the subject's behavior. Actual legal scope ranges from public relations to private affairs, as well as humanitarian to humanitarian approaches.