For the final project, I will compare two works of art, one visual, and one written. For the visual artwork, the Stele with Law Code of Hammurabi, and for the literary piece of work the Code of Hammurabi. Then consider how the artwork both share a theme, and how they find expression in contemporary concepts and actions. Accordingly, I will compare the themes, tones, and content of the Stele of Hammurabi and the Code of Hammurabi. Additionally, I will connect history, similarities, and how it can influence modern society. Images of Stele Law Code of Hammurabi and Code (Code of Hammurabi) The Stele Law Code of Hammurabi monument is seven foot tall, and estimated two feet wide (Code of Hammurabi). The upper portion of the stela is devoted …show more content…
Then in 1902, a French Dominican priest and Assyriologist, Jean-Vincent Scheil translated the code (Stele of Hammurabi). The Code of Hammurabi refers to a set of rules or laws, enacted by the Babylonian King Hammurabi, reign from 1792-1750 B.C, this code governed the people living in his fast-growing empire (Stele with Law Code of Hammurabi). The Code of Hammurabi, established by Hammurabi the sixth of the Babylonian King's (circa 1760 BCE), embodied one of the earliest, most complete written legal codes (MindEdge). The Hammurabi Code established standards of behavior, cataloged crimes, and their various punishments (MindEdge). For instance, having the code displayed, for all to see, allowed the citizens to read the laws that governed, and the laws could not be manipulated (Code of Hammurabi). Hammurabi's code provides an example of the doctrine of "lex talionis," or the law of retribution, "an eye for an eye" (Code of Hammurabi). There are 282 pronouncements, all written in the if-then form, and the decrees ranged from family law to regulatory law outlining different standards of justice for the three classes of Babylonian society- the propertied class, freedmen, and slaves. The more serve punishments where reserved for the …show more content…
For instance, in a verse from the monument "prevent the strong from opposing the weak and to see justice is done "(Code of Hammurabi). In comparrison, under America's first governing document, the Constitution of the United States, specifically the Bill of Rights, which sought basic human protections and rights to the people governed by it (Constitution). Interestingly, the United States Supreme Courts House of Chambers features a marble relief sculpture of Hammurabi, illustrating that he was a historical figure noted for establishing principal's that underlie American law