The king who wrote the world’s first legal code and accidentally invented the concept of “rules for thee but not for me.”
The king who wrote the world’s first legal code and accidentally invented the concept of “rules for thee but not for me.”
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The guy who carved 282 laws into a giant stone just to make sure future generations knew stealing was bad but breaking bones was negotiable.
The Mesopotamian lawgiver who proved written rules are great until someone richer than you breaks them and just pays the “eye tax.”
The king who decided justice should be proportional, unless you’re a slave – then losing an eye costs less than a cow.
The ancient Babylonian king who invented “an eye for an eye” so everyone could finally agree revenge is fair—as long as you’re not the one losing the eye.
The ancient reformer who thought “if a man puts out the eye of another man, his eye shall be put out” was progressive until someone tried it on him.
The lawmaker who gave us the first written legal system and proved humanity has been arguing over “fair punishment” for 4,000 years.