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Code of Hammurabi

Overview

The Code of Hammurabi (~1754 BCE) is one of the most complete and well-known ancient legal codes, inscribed on a basalt stele and containing 282 laws governing Babylonian society. @t[~1754 BCE]

Key Facts

  • Date: ~1754 BCE (Wikipedia/Roth give range 17551751 BCE) @t[~1754 BCE]
  • Issuer: Hammurabi, sixth king of the First Babylonian Dynasty
  • Language: Akkadian (Old Babylonian dialect), written in cuneiform script
  • Medium: Black basalt stele, 2.25 m tall (some older sources describe the material as diorite) 1
  • Current location: Louvre Museum, Paris (discovered at Susa, Iran, 19011902) 1
  • Weight: approximately 4 tons

Structure

  • Prologue: Hammurabi as divinely appointed shepherd of his people; relief at top depicts Hammurabi receiving authority from Shamash, the sun god 2
  • 282 laws organized by topic, written vertically in cuneiform
  • Epilogue: Blessings for those who uphold the laws, curses for those who deface the stele 2
  • Lex talionis: "An eye for an eye, a tooth for a tooth" (with class-based modifications) 3
  • Three social classes: awilum (free), mushkenum (dependent), wardum (slave)
  • Covers: Property, trade, family law, labor, personal injury, agriculture
  • Presumption of innocence in some cases; trial by ordeal in others 3
  • Prescribed specific penalties for each crime; limited retribution to proportional response

Discovery and Transmission

  • The stele was taken as plunder to Susa by the Elamite king Shutruk-Nahhunte around 1158 BCE, approximately 600 years after its creation
  • Rediscovered by French archaeologists at Susa in 19011902
  • The text was copied and studied by Mesopotamian scribes for over a millennium after its creation, attesting to its lasting authority 4

Significance

  • Not the earliest code (preceded by Code of Ur-Nammu, ~21002050 BCE) but the longest, best-organized, and best-preserved legal text from the ancient Near East 4
  • Provides detailed picture of Old Babylonian society
  • Influenced later Near Eastern legal traditions; parallels noted with the Law of Moses in the Torah 4
  • Continues to be studied for its influence on modern legal jurisprudence


  1. Louvre Museum. "The Code of Hammurabi." louvre.fr (accessed 2026) ↩︎

  2. Roth, M.T. Law Collections from Mesopotamia and Asia Minor (1997) ↩︎

  3. Driver, G.R. & Miles, J.C. The Babylonian Laws (Oxford, 19521955) ↩︎

  4. Wikipedia contributors. "Code of Hammurabi." Wikipedia (accessed 2026-02-23) ↩︎