The Ur-Nammu's Code Of Hammurabi

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The City-State of Ur served as a foundation for Mesopotamia, and for the path of mankind. It’s great kings created a society based on a written code of law before Babylonia. They had a trade network connecting goods to their kingdom from as far away as India, and served as the home of the Sumerian Renaissance. During its golden era Ur compares to that of Renaissance Florence, or Istanbul during the reign of Suleiman the Magnificent.

Some 300 years before Hammurabi of Babylon created the famous “Code of Hammurabi,” the great king Ur-Nammu had written his own set of laws for the City-State of Ur. While Babylon is considered to be the foundation of the “written code of law,” it’s actually Ur who has the earliest known written code of law. “The Code of Ur-Nannu” is believed to have been written around 2050 BCE, and details the governance of his realm in accordance to a patriarchal hierarchy. A form of governance which continued for centuries, and even carried on to modern times in select cultures. …show more content…

From its very beginning, Ur was a center for trade and commerce, owing its success to its vital geographical position. Sitting at a pivotal point where the Tigris and Euphrates converges into the Persian Gulf Ur naturally grew into an economically powerful state, much like that of New York City, or Alexandria. In the 3rd century BCE, the Sumerians in southern mesopotamia, primarily Ur, began trading with the HarappAn Civilization of the Indus Valley. Ur’s wealth, and elevated level of living for citizens, was primarily formed through this trade with India; gaining the spices and other goods native to India, but also gaining the benefits of India’s trade

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