King Hammurabi was the sixth king of the Old Babylonia First Dynasty. Hammurabi goal was to centralize state authority and to create a new legal order. (Tignor et al. 97) King Hammurabi was the first king to record every single law of his empire. He had a black stone enbowed with the 282 laws of Babylonia. On top of the stone is a statue of a God holding the laws to Hammurabi. Because of his structured codes, Hammurabi was labeled as an influential leader. These would be the governing laws of all his people. The Babylonian people then knew all of the punishments and consequences for breaking the laws, and they also knew what they must due when accusing a criminal as well. Laws play a very important role in the up rising of a nation. Justice is the value of those laws from an impartial standpoint. The laws consisted of 282 provisions arranged under multiple subjects from family, personal property to trade and business. These laws established penalties with the philosophy that the punishment should fit the crime. …show more content…
He made rules and laws to be followed to keep everything in order. The Code reveals the priorities that Hammurabi and his kingdom had. The family unit showed to be very highly in the Code of Hammurabi, and a lot of laws were created to protect it. Honesty is another important factor in the Code. Lying or bringing false accusations against another brought a large amount of punishment, sometimes a man’s life. The Code includes crimes such as stealing , cheating, as well as lying. The punishment for these crimes varied from having an ear cut off to even