In Our Time: History

The Code of Hammurabi

11 snips
Mar 12, 2026
Selena Wisnom, lecturer in Middle Eastern heritage, outlines Mesopotamian religion and social context. Frances Reynolds, Assyriologist, discusses the stele, imagery and legal language. Martin Worthington, Babylonian language specialist, examines Hammurabi, judicial practice and tablets. They explore the stele’s appearance, divine legitimation, legal form, social strata, and how law circulated in ancient Mesopotamia.
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ANECDOTE

River Ordeal Actually Used In Mari Letters

  • The river ordeal decided hard cases like witchcraft: the accused entered the river and survival meant innocence.
  • Mari letters show people actually underwent this test, sometimes carrying a millstone to make crossing harder.
INSIGHT

Lex Talionis Is Tiered By Social Status

  • 'An eye for an eye' appears but punishments vary by social status and context.
  • Upper‑class offenders faced corporal reciprocation; commoners and slaves faced fines or compensation instead.
INSIGHT

Code Reveals Three Clear Social Strata

  • The code reveals clear social strata: awelum (free citizens), mushkenum (retainers), and slaves, each with different legal rights.
  • Liability often fell on owners for slave offenses; mushkenum had intermediate obligations.
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