About This Book
The book surveys the legal and social institutions of ancient Babylonia and Assyria, presenting laws, contracts, and letters that illuminate courts, family law, property, trade, slavery, and temple functions. It treats major codifications alongside earlier and later legal materials and explains judicial processes, criminal and public rights, inheritance, marriage, divorce, adoption, and the status of widows and children. Commercial practice receives detailed attention in chapters on sales, loans, pledges, wages, leases, partnerships, and accounting, with discussion of land tenure and obligations for personal service. A final section analyzes private and official correspondence and the difficulties of interpreting fragmentary cuneiform documents, with practical appendices on chronology and measures.
About the Author
More Books by This Author
You May Also Like
The Story of Assisi
by Lina Duff Gordon
The Grandeur That Was Rome: a survey of Roman culture and civilisation
by J. C. Stobart
Islas Filipinas - Administracion de Justicia / Memoria dedicada á la exposicion colonial de Amsterdam
by Carlos Villarragut y Estevan
Roman Women
by Alfred Brittain
I. Origen de los indios de América. II. Origen y civilizaciones de los indígenas del Perú.
by Carlos Prince
Kultur-Kuriosa, Zweiter Band
by Max Kemmerich
