Hammurabi (Akkadian Khammurabi,
from Amorite Ammurapi, "The Kinsman is a Healer"; Ammu,
paternal kinsman + Rapi, to heal; also transliterated
Ammurapi, Hammurapi, or Khammurabi) was the sixth king of
Babylon. Achieving the conquest of Sumer and Akkad, and
ending the last Sumerian dynasty of Isin, he was the first
king of the Babylonian Empire.
Hammurabi reigned over the Babylonian Empire from 1792 BC
until his death in 1750 BC (middle chronology; 1728-1686 BC
short chronology; dates highly uncertain). He was born in
1810. It was he who first gave the city of Babylon hegemony
over Mesopotamia.
The first few decades of his reign were relatively peaceful.
In the 30th year of his reign, Hammurabi crushed an invading
army consisting of Elamite and other forces in a decisive
battle, and drove them out of Babylonia. The next two years
were occupied in adding Larsa and Yamutbal to his dominion,
and he formed Babylonia into a single monarchy centred on
Babylon. A great literary revival followed the recovery of
Babylonian independence, and the rule of Babylon was obeyed
as far as the shores of the Mediterranean Sea. Vast numbers
of contract tablets, dated in the reigns of Hammurabi and
his successors, have been discovered, as well as their
autographed letters. Among them is one ordering the dispatch
of 240 soldiers from Assyria and Situllum, a proof that
Assyria was at the time a Babylonian dependency.
Hammurabi expanded the rule of Babylon by first conquering
cities towards the south, before his conquest expanded to
cover most parts of Mesopotamia. His military conquests came
late in his reign, perhaps brought on by the fall of
Shamshi-Adad's empire.
He is perhaps best known for promulgating his code of laws,
known as the Code of Hammurabi. This was written on a stela
and placed in a public place, so that all could see it, even
though very few could read. This stela was removed as
plunder to the Elamite capital Susa, where it was
rediscovered in 1901, and it now stands in the Louvre
museum. While the penalties of his laws may seem cruel to
modern readers, the fact that he not only put into writing
the laws of his kingdom, but attempted to make them a
systematic whole, is considered an important step forward in
the evolution of civilization. The "innocent until proven
guilty" idea comes from his laws.
One fairly new theory is that the modern designation of it
as a law code is wrong: it is thus seen merely as a monument
"presenting Hammurabi as an exemplary king of justice."
While dealing with many areas of life, the entries do not,
by far, cover all possible crimes, and the stele may
actually contain contradictions. While the code was applied
and studied extensively in later Babylonian law (as seen in
the library of Ashurbanipal), there as of yet have been no
contemporary records discovered that record its use as an
actual functioning law code during Hammurabi's own time.
Hammurabi also did other things in order to make Babylon a
better place, such as helping to improve the irrigation
process.
Following Hammurabi's successors, the Babylonian Empire
collapsed due to military pressure from the Hittites, led by
their king Mursilis I. However it was the Kassites, led by
their king Agumkakrine, who eventually ruled Babylon.
Although there were many rebellious cities, the Kassites
ruled for 400 years, and respected the Code of Hammurabi.
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