Code of Hammurabi
(c. 1700 B.C.E.)
Note: The Code of Hammurabi was a compilation of almost three hundred laws on every aspect of life. Much can be learned both about Mesopotamian life and ideals through these laws. It should be kept in mind that we cannot be sure how well enforced these laws were, but it is safe to say that a powerful king in ancient Mesopotamia thought these were the laws that would guide a just society. This code was not was not an entirely new set of laws, but a compilation and revision of earlier law codes of the Sumerians and Akkadians
Prologue:
. . . When Marduk (God of Babylon) sent me to rule the people and to bring help to the country, I established law and justice in the language of the land and promoted the welfare of the people. At that time I decreed:
Justice
1.
If a man brings an accusation against another man, charging him with murder,
but cannot prove it, the accuser shall be put to death.
2. If a man has accused another of laying a spell upon him, but has not
proved it, the accused shall go to the sacred river, he shall plunge into the
sacred river, and if the sacred river shall conquer him, he that accused him
shall take possession of his house. If the sacred river shall show his
innocence and he is saved, his accuser shall be put to death.
3. If a man bears false witness in a case, or does not establish the
testimony that he has given, if that case is case involving life, that man
shall be put to death.
4. If a man bears false witness concerning grain or money, he shall
himself bear the penalty imposed in the case.
5. If a judge pronounces judgment, renders a decision, delivers a verdict
duly signed and sealed, and afterward alters his judgment ,
they shall call that judge to account for the alteration of the judgment which
he has pronounced, and he shall pay twelve-fold the penalty in that judgment;
and, in the assembly, they shall expel him from his judgment seat.
Property
6.
If a man has stolen goods from a temple, or house, he shall be put to death;
and he that has received the stolen property from him shall be put to death.
14. If a man has stolen a child, he shall be put to death.
22. If a man practices robbery and is captured, that man shall be put to
death.
23. If the robber is not captured, the man who has been robbed shall, in
the presence of god, make and itemized statement of his loss, and the city and
the governor in whose jurisdiction the robbery was committed shall compensate
him for whatever was lost.
24. If it is a life that is lost, the city and governor shall pay (one
pound) of silver to his heirs.
26. If a levy-master, or warrant officer, who has been detailed on the
king's service, has not gone, or has hired a substitute in his place, that
levy-master or warrant officer shall be put to death and the hired substitute
shall take his place.
Irrigation
53.
If a man neglects to maintain his dike and does not
strengthen it, and a break is made in his dike and the water carries away the
farmland, the man in whose dike the break has been made shall replace the grain
which has been damaged.
54. If he is not able to replace the grain, they shall sell him and his
goods and the farmers whose grain the water has carried away shall divide the
proceeds from the sale.
Trade
88.
If a merchant lends grain at interest, for one gur he
shall receive on hundred sila as interest (33
percent); if he lends money at interest, for one
shekel of silver he shall receive one-fifth of a shekel as interest.
104. If a merchant gives to an agent grain, wool, oil, or goods of any
kind with which to trade, the agent shall write down the value and return the
money to the merchant. The agent shall take a sealed
receipt for the money which he gives to the merchant.
105. If the agent is careless and does not take a receipt for the money which he has given to the merchant, the money not
receipted for shall not be placed to his account.
108. If a wine seller does not take grain for the price of a drink but
takes money by the large weight, or if she makes the measure of drink smaller
than the measure of grain, they shall call that wine seller to account and
throw her into the water.
109. If bad characters gather in the house of a wine seller and she
does not arrest them and bring them to the palace, that wine seller shall be
put to death.
110. If a priestess who is not living in a convent opens a wine shop or
enters a wine shop for a drink, they shall burn that woman.
117. If a man is in debt and sells his wife, son, or daughter, or binds
them over to service, for three years they shall work in the house of their
purchaser of master; in the fourth year they shall be given their freedom.
Family
129.
If the wife of a man is caught lying with another man, they shall bind them and
throw them into the water. If the husband of the woman wishes to spare
his wife, then the king shall spare his servant.
130. If a man has ravished another's betrothed wife, who is a virgin,
while still living in her father's house, and has been caught in the act, that
man shall be put to death; the woman shall go free.
131. If a man has accused his wife but she has not been caught lying with
another man, she shall take an oath in the name of god and return to her house.
138. If a man wishes to divorce his wife who has not borne him
children, he shall give her money to the amount of her marriage price and he
shall make good to her the dowry which she brought
from her father's house and then he may divorce her.
141. If the wife of a man who is living in her husband's house, has
persisted in going out, has acted the fool, has waster her house, has belittled
her husband, he shall prosecute her. If her husband has said, "I
divorce her," she shall go her way; he shall give her nothing as her price
of divorce. If her husband has said "I will
not divorce her" he may take another woman to wife; the wife shall live as
a slave in her husband's house.
142. If a woman has hated her husband and has said, "You shall
not possess me,: her past shall be inquired into, as
to what she lacks. If she has been discreet, and has no vice, and her
husband has gone out, and has greatly belittled her; that woman has not blame,
she shall take her marriage portion and go off to her father's house.
143. If she has not been discreet, has gone out, ruined her house,
belittled her husband, she shall be drowned.
150. If a man has presented a field, garden, house, or goods to his wife,
has granted her a deed of gift, her children, after her husband's death, shall
not dispute her right; the mother shall leave it after her death to that one of
her children whom she loves best. She shall not leave it to an outsider.
153. If a man's wife, for the sake of another, has caused her husband to
be killed, that woman shall be impaled
154. If a man has committed incest with his daughter, that man shall be
banished from the city.
155. If a man has betrothed a maiden to his son and his son has known
her, and afterward the man has lain in her bosom, and been caught, that man
shall be strangled and she shall be cast into the water.
156. If a man has betrothed a maiden to his son, and his son has not
known her, and that man has lain in her bosom, she shall pay her half a mina of
silver, and shall pay over to her whatever she brought from her father's house,
and the husband of her choice shall marry her.
159 If a man who has brought a gift to the house of his father-in-law and
has paid the marriage price, looks with longing upon another woman and says to
his father-in-law, "I will not marry your daughter," the father of
the daughter shall take to himself whatever was brought to him.
168. If a man sets his face to disinherit his son and says to the judges,
"I will disinherit my son," the judges shall inquire into his record,
and if the son has not committed a crime sufficiently grave to cut him off from
sonship, the father may not cut off his son from sonship.
170. If a man's wife bears him children and his maidservant bears him
children, and the father during his lifetime says to the children which the
maidservant bore him, "My children," and reckons them with the
children of his wife, after the father dies the children of the wife and the
children of the maidservant shall divide the goods of the father's estates
equally. The son of the wife shall have the right of choice a
the division.
Personal Injury
195.
If a son strikes his father, they shall cut off his hand.
196. If a man destroys the eye of another man, they shall destroy his
eye.
197. If he breaks another man's bone, they shall break his bone.
198. If he destroys the eye of a plebeian or breaks the bone of a
plebeian, he shall pay one mina of silver.
199. If he destroys the eye of a man's slave or beaks a bone of a man's
slave, he shall pay one-half his price.
200. If a man knocks out a tooth of a man of his own rank, they shall
knock out his tooth
201. If he knocks out a tooth of a plebeian, he shall pay one-third mina
of silver
209. If a man has struck a free woman with child, and has caused her to
miscarry, he shall pay ten shekels for her miscarriage
210. If that woman die, his daughter shall be
killed.
211. If by a blow he has caused a plebian's daughter to have a miscarriage, he shall pay five shekels of silver.
212. If that woman has died, he shall pay one-half mina of silver.
213. If he struck a freeman's female slave and has caused her to have a miscarriage, he shall pay two shekels of silver.
214. If that female slave has died, he shall pay one-third mina of silver.
Physicians and Malpractice
215.
If a physician operates on a man for a sever wound with a bronze lancet and
saves the man's life, or if he opens an abscess in the eye of a man with a
bronze lancet and saves that man's eye, he shall receive ten shekels of silver.
216. If he is a plebeian, he shall receive five shekels.
217. If he is a slave, the owner shall pay two shekels.
218. If a physician operates on a man for a sever wound with a bronze
lancet and causes the man's death, or destroys the man's eye, they shall cut
off his hand.
219. If a physician operates on a slave for a severe wound and causes his
death, he shall restore a slave of equal value.
Building Code
229.
If a builder builds a house for a man and does not make its construction sound,
and the house which he has built collapses and causes
the death of the owner of the house, the builder shall be put to death.
233. If a builder builds a house for a man and does not make its
construction sound, and a wall cracks, that builder shall strengthen that wall
at his own expense.
Property and Wage Regulations
244.
If a man has hired an ox, or an ass, and a lion has killed it in the open
field, the loss falls on the owner.
245. If a man has hired an ox and has caused its death, by carelessness,
or blows, he shall restore ox for ox, to the owner of the ox.
249. If a man has hired an ox, and god has struck it, and it has died,
the man that hired the ox shall make affidavit and go free.
250. If a bull has gone wild and gored a man, and caused his death, there
can be no suit against the owner.
251. If a man's ox be a gorer, and has revealed
its evil propensity as a gorer, and he has not
blunted its horn, or shut up the ox, and then that ox has gored a free man, and
caused his death, the owner shall pay half a mina of silver
257. If a man hires a field laborer, he shall pay him eight gur of grain per year.
258. If a man hires a herdsman, he shall pay him six gur
of grain per year.
268. If a man hires on ox to thresh, twenty sila
of grain is his daily hire.
282. If a slave has said to his master, "You are not my
master," he shall be brought to account as his slave, and his master shall
cut off his ear.