| word looked up : | home / archive |
Code of HammurabiThe Code of Hammurabi is one of the earliest sets of laws found, and one of the best preserved examples of this type of document from ancient Mesopotamia. It shows rules and punishments if those rules are defied. It focuses on theft, farming (or shepherding), property damage, women’s rights, marriage rights, children’s rights, slave rights, and murder, death, and injury. The laws do not accept excuses or explanations for mistakes or fault. Hammurabi felt he had to write the code to please his gods. But unlike some other kings, he did not consider himself related in any way to any god, although he did call himself "the favorite of the gods". There were 282 laws on an obsidian stela, and it is about 8 feet tall. It was discovered in 1909. It is now on display at the Louvre Museum in Paris, France. The code is often pointed to as the first example of the legal concept that some laws are so basic as to be beyond the ability of even a king to change. By writing the laws on stone they were immutable and incapable of being changed. This concept lives on in most modern legal systems and has given rise to the term "written in stone".
External link
With deep meaning
to be.
tragedy and comedy.html">comedy, grew out of the songs and dances instituted in honor
sprang from the graver songs, and comedy (village-song) from the lighter
being at first but a single speaker, then two, and finally three, which
introduced this idea of the dialogue.html">dialogue; hence the term "Thespian" applied to
character, and further, presented two distinct features, the chorus.html">chorus (the
important part; but later, the dialogue became the more prominent portion,
performance. Finally, in the golden age of the Attic stage, the chorus
dialogue became the masterpiece of some great poet,--and then the Greek
tragedy,--Æschylus, Sophocles, and Euripides. These dramatists all wrote
war, when the intellectual life of all Hellas, and especially that of
intensity to almost all they wrote, particularly to the tragedies of
these poets, only thirty-two have escaped the accidents of time.
Æschylus (525-456 B.C.) knew how to touch the hearts of the. All is still licensed under the GNU FDL.
|
|
|||||