Download Do Now

Survey
yes no Was this document useful for you?
   Thank you for your participation!

* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project

Document related concepts

Mesopotamia wikipedia , lookup

History of Mesopotamia wikipedia , lookup

Transcript
History
N a me :
Unit 3:
Date:
Mesopotamia
The Code of Hammurabi
As you know, Hammurabi’s Code included more than 200 laws. Listed below are
four of those laws that we will use in class today. Read all four laws so you are
prepared for your job on the jury today in class. Underline the crime in each law. Box
the punishment in each law.
Law 196: If a man puts out the eye of another man of the same social class, his eye
shall be put out.
Law 197: If a man breaks another noble man's bone, his bone shall be broken.
Law 198: If a nobleman puts out the eye of a commoner or slave or breaks the bone of
a commoner or slave, he shall pay one piece of silver.
Law 199: If a slave puts out the eye of a nobleman or injures him in another way, he
shall immediately be put to death.
History
N a me :
Unit 3:
Date:
Mesopotamia
The Court of Hammurabi
Case 1 – Sabium v. Eshuh
Bailiff: All rise! Welcome to Hammurabi’s court. The honorable King Hammurabi, ruler, law-maker
and judge of all Babylon now entering. You may be seated!
Hammurabi: My people! Today, we are gathered to hear several cases. I, King Hammurabi, will
pass judgment on the cases presented before me, but I may ask my people for their assistance in this
matter. Please listen to the facts carefully and prepare to help me pass judgment. Bailiff, what is the
first case?
Bailiff: The first case is between Sabium the Slave and Eshuh the Slave.
Hammurabi: Sabium, could you please explain what happened?
Sabium: Eshuh and I were working in the fields, and I challenged him to a race – whoever could pick
the most grain in an hour would win the other person’s dinner. When I won, he poked me in the eye!
Hammurabi: What happened to your eye?
Sabium: It was so damaged that I can never use it again! I’m going to be beaten because I can’t pick
grain as fast! Eshuh put out my eye!
Hammurabi: Do you have any witnesses?
History
N a me :
Unit 3:
Date:
Mesopotamia
Sabium: Yes I do. My sister saw the whole thing.
Hammurabi: Eshuh, do you admit that you poked Sabium in the eye?
Eshuh: Yes, your honor. But she cheated! She deserved it!
Hammurabi: Do you have any proof that Sabium cheated?
Eshuh: No! But she’s so much worse at picking grain than me! How could she out-pick me?
Hammurabi: I’ve heard enough.
Would you say Eshuh is guilty? Write in complete sentences and explain your answer.
History
N a me :
Unit 3:
Date:
Mesopotamia
JURY QUESTION
Case 1: Sabium versus Eshuh
Verdict for Eshuh (Circle One)
GUILTY
NOT GUILTY
Which law applies here? Law #_____________
Why do you believe this law applies?
What should the punishment be?
Why should what you wrote above be the punishment?
__________________________________________________________________
History
N a me :
Unit 3:
Date:
Mesopotamia
Case 2 – Agum v. Ush
Bailiff: The Honorable King Hammurabi has given his verdict. Next, the court needs to hear the
case of Agum the Nobleman versus Ush the Slave.
Hammurabi: Agum and Ush, could you please step forward? Agum, since you’re the nobleman, you
can start first. Tell us what happened.
Agum: Well, Ush was my slave for years. He wasn’t a good slave. He was lazy and never did his
work, so I used to punish him. Then, one day, I asked him to carry several bags of grain to my home.
He threw them down too roughly on the floor and they spilled into a ditch. I began to punish him, but
he turned around and fought me.
Hammurabi: Was anyone else present at the time?
Agum: Yes, all of my slaves, and my family were there. They all jumped to help me.
Hammurabi: And then what?
Agum: Before they could do anything, Ush took a rock and scraped it across my eye.
Hammurabi: So that’s why you wear an eyepatch? You’re blind? Ush, is this untrue?
History
N a me :
Unit 3:
Date:
Mesopotamia
Ush: It’s true that I fought him and that he lost his eye, but it was a fair fight. See, I had saved
enough money to buy my freedom, but he wouldn’t give it to me. I called him a coward, and then he
offered to fight me. Whoever won, he said, would control me.
Hammurabi: Ush, do you have any proof?
Ush: Yes. I have the written testimony of three people, right here.
Hammurabi: But Ush, you still agree that you fought Agum and he lost his eye in the fight?
Ush: Yes.
Hammurabi: I’ve heard enough.
Would you say Ush is guilty? Write in complete sentences and explain your answer.
History
N a me :
Unit 3:
Date:
Mesopotamia
JURY QUESTION
Case 2: Agum versus Ush
Verdict for Ush (Circle One)
GUILTY
NOT GUILTY
Which law applies here? Law #_____________
Why do you believe this law applies?
What should the punishment be?
Why should what you wrote above be the punishment?
__________________________________________________________________
Case 3 – Simbar v. Kassu
History
N a me :
Unit 3:
Date:
Mesopotamia
Bailiff: The Honorable King Hammurabi has given his verdict. Next, the court needs to hear the
case of Kassu the Slave versus Simbar the Noblewoman. Kassu and Simbar, please step forward.
Hammurabi: Kassu, as the accuser, you may go first. Please tell us what happened.
Kassu: I’m a slave, sir, and I work for Simbar, who is a Noblewoman. One day she told me to go to
the market to buy her figs to eat. I went, sir, but I got detained.
Hammurabi: Detained? What does that mean?
Kassu: Well, I had to walk around for hours to find the figs that were good enough for Simbar. Then,
a child stole some so I had to track him down to get them back because I didn’t want to return to
Simbar without all of the figs. It took me hours to get home, but I was just trying to do my job!
Simbar: That’s a lie, you lazy slave! You were sitting in the market talking with the other slaves!
Hammurabi: Simbar, let the slave finish his story!
Kassu: Well, when I got home, Simbar was so angry that she threw a pot at me. The sharp handle
stuck me in the eye, and now I’m blind. Simbar beats me every day because I’m so slow and clumsy,
but I can’t see anymore! This is her fault!
Simbar: That’s a lie, you clumsy slave! You poked yourself in the eye as you tripped coming up the
stairs!
History
N a me :
Unit 3:
Date:
Mesopotamia
Hammurabi: Kassu, do you have any witnesses?
Kassu: Yes I do. My wife, who is also a slave, saw the whole thing happen.
Hammurabi: Is she here to testify?
Kassu: Yes. Her name is Shauna.
Hammurabi: Shauna, please come to the front. Can you tell us what you saw?
Shauna: Well, my husband came home with all the figs, and I helped him put them all on a beautiful
plate to bring up to Simbar. When he walked towards her room, I heard her start screaming, so I
decided I’d better go and help him. That’s when I saw her throw a pot at him, and the pot stick in his
eye! There was blood everywhere, and all Simbar kept screaming was that he was messing up her
floor!
Hammurabi: Simbar, do you deny this?
Simbar: Lies. All lies! They were terrible slaves, and I sold them. They’re just trying to get back at
me.
Hammurabi: I’ve heard enough.
History
N a me :
Unit 3:
Date:
Mesopotamia
Would you say Simbar is guilty? Write in complete sentences and explain your answer.
JURY QUESTION
Case 3: Kassu versus Simbar
History
N a me :
Unit 3:
Date:
Mesopotamia
Verdict for Simbar (Circle One)
GUILTY
NOT GUILTY
Which law applies here? Law #_____________
Why do you believe this law applies?
What should the punishment be?
Why should what you wrote above be the punishment?
__________________________________________________________________