The Babylonian law code of Hammurabi and the Oligarchy. Hammurabi was the 6th ruler in the Babylonian line, which managed in focal Mesopotamia (present-day Iraq) from c.1894 to 1595 B.C. His family was slid from the Amorites, a semi-migrant tribe in western Syria, and his name mirrors a blend of societies: Hammu, which signifies "family" in Amorite, consolidated with rapi, signifying "incredible" in Akkadian, the regular dialect of Babylon. In the 30th year of his rule Hammurabi started to extend his kingdom all over the Euphrates, ousting Larsa, Eshunna, Assyria and Mari until all of Mesopotamia under his
The Babylonian law code of Hammurabi and the Oligarchy. Hammurabi was the 6th ruler in the Babylonian line, which managed in focal Mesopotamia (present-day Iraq) from c.1894 to 1595 B.C. His family was slid from the Amorites, a semi-migrant tribe in western Syria, and his name mirrors a blend of societies: Hammu, which signifies "family" in Amorite, consolidated with rapi, signifying "incredible" in Akkadian, the regular dialect of Babylon. In the 30th year of his rule Hammurabi started to extend his kingdom all over the Euphrates, ousting Larsa, Eshunna, Assyria and Mari until all of Mesopotamia under his