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3.2: Stela of Hammurabi

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    Stela of Hammurabi

    2.png

    Artist: Unknown
    Medium: Basalt
    Art Historical Time Period: Babylonian (c. 1754 BCE)

    The Stela of Hammurabi is one of the most famous artworks from ancient Mesopotamia. It is a large stone pillar with a written law code created by King Hammurabi. This artwork was made to show the laws of the Babylonian Empire, which were intended to provide justice for everyone, from the poor to the rich. The stela was placed in a public area so that all people could see and read the laws. It was a way to communicate the king’s decisions and bring order to society.

    What is innovative about the Stela of Hammurabi is that it represents one of the earliest examples of a written legal system. It set the standard for later legal codes in other cultures. The stela also combines both written laws and visual symbols, with a scene showing Hammurabi receiving the laws from the sun god Shamash. This blend of art and law influenced future art that communicated ideas of power, justice, and authority, continuing to inspire how laws are presented in the modern world.

    Vocabulary

    • Stela A stone or wooden slab with inscriptions, often marking events or laws.
    • Law code A set of written rules used to govern a society.

    Student Authors

    • Javier Navarro ’26 and Mariana Jimenez ’24

    References and Image Attribution

    • Stone, Irving. The Laws of Hammurabi: A New Translation and Analysis. Yale University Press, 2000.

    • Sauer, Ernst. “The Stela of Hammurabi and the Concept of Law.” Journal of Near Eastern Studies, vol. 40, no. 4, 1981, pp. 245–268.

    • Image: “P1050763 Louvre code Hammurabi face rwk-gradient” via Wikimedia Commons by Rama, licensed under CC BY-SA 2.0 FR. Modified from original.

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    3.2: Stela of Hammurabi is shared under a not declared license and was authored, remixed, and/or curated by LibreTexts.

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