Ancient Laws and Modern Problems: The Balance Between Justice and A Legal System

Ancient Laws and Modern Problems: The Balance Between Justice and A Legal System

by John Sassoon
Ancient Laws and Modern Problems: The Balance Between Justice and A Legal System

Ancient Laws and Modern Problems: The Balance Between Justice and A Legal System

by John Sassoon

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Overview

John Sassoon’s study of the written laws of four thousand years ago puts paid to the belief that the most ancient laws were merely arbitrary and tyrannical. On the contrary, the earliest legal systems honestly tried to get to the truth, do justice to individuals, and preserve civil order. They used the death penalty surprisingly seldom, and then more because society had been threatened than an individual killed.
Some of the surviving law codes are originals, others near-contemporary copies. Together they preserve a partial but vivid picture of life in the early cites. This occupies more than half the book.
Comparison of ancient with modern principles occupies the remainder and is bound to be controversial; but it is important as well as fascinating. The first act of writing laws diminished the discretion of the judges and foretold a limit on individual justice. Some political principles such as uniformity of treatment or individual freedom have, when carried to extremes, produced crises in modern legal systems world wide.
But it is tempting but wrong to blame the judges or the lawyers for doing what society require of them.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781841509174
Publisher: Intellect Books
Publication date: 04/01/2005
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
File size: 14 MB
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Ancient Laws and Modern Problems

The Balance Between Justice and a Legal System


By John Sassoon

Intellect Ltd

Copyright © 2004 John Sassoon
All rights reserved.
ISBN: 978-1-84150-917-4



CHAPTER 1

EMERGENCE FROM PREHISTORY

THE WORD 'HISTORY' when applied to mankind, has at least two meanings: it can mean the actual succession of events; or it can mean those events or aspects of mankind's story that historians select as relevant to a theme and choose to present. The former is what happened; the latter is what is taught. But it is the latter that paints the picture for the reader's mind and enlightens or deceives him – unless he be alert – according to the imagination, the judgement and the intention of the historian. The judgement and detachment of a master was surely displayed by Edward Gibbon when he published, as early as 1788, these thoughts about the nature of human progress in The History of the Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire:

His progress in the improvement in the exercise of his mental and corporeal faculties has been irregular and various; infinitely slow in the beginning, and increasing by degrees with redoubled velocity: ages of laborious ascent have been followed by a moment of rapid downfall; and the several climates of the globe have felt the vicissitudes of light and darkness. Yet the experience of four thousand years should enlarge our hopes and diminish our apprehensions; we cannot determine to what height the human species may aspire in their advances towards perfection; but it may safely be presumed that no people, unless the face of nature is changed, will relapse into their original barbarism.


Beyond the starts and stops of the grand scene, the temporary empires, the destruction of cities, lay the continuum of ordinary lives, a less eventful subject that is easily overlooked by historians intent only on recording change. The few moments when recorded history happened hide the long intervals when it did not, and thus the tale is stunted. The decision to omit material which the historian sees as irrelevant to his purpose makes it possible to present a coherent picture, but it can distort more than one perspective.

To try and see Sumer, Akkad and Babylon and their laws as part of the real continuum it is necessary to envisage the slow emergence of civilisation from the old stone age to the early cities and to identify some of the prehistoric elements on which modern civilisation is built.

The story of Sumer has been written many times, based on objects actually found, such as astonishing buildings, sculpture, wealth, records of empire, but with scarcely a word about the problems of ordinary men and women – as though these were neither history nor interesting. The surviving laws, which are widely available, tell us that neither people nor relationships have changed much in four thousand years. But if laws are mentioned at all in the histories it is probably for their legal procedures rather than the picture they paint of ancient lives. These laws reveal how our predecessors coped with many situations that still baffle us: for instance, what did they do with a rebellious teenage son, or a daughter who went on the street and came back pregnant? Their laws also throw a dim but fascinating light on prehistoric societies where most of their problems and some of their laws originated; they can still provoke discussion of many an unsolved problem today.

Too often studies of ancient laws reflect a legal outlook that combines a dismissive tone with the faintest of praise. Some fasten, rightly, on the role of superstition which called on the gods to resolve problems to which there was no answer – as though we never have recourse to Deity. They forget that ancient legal systems did not depend on chance for most of the time and that they did recognise all of the time that an honest search for the truth is a precondition of justice. A study of ancient laws tells us that prehistory was not primitive, and it casts light on how even the basic concept of justice is far from simple.

Discoveries fundamental to the development of the modern world had mostly been made far back in prehistory by men and women of clearly modern intelligence: the use of fire, pottery, the domestication of animals, the wheel, farming, metallurgy, are obvious examples. Less generally recognised as prehistoric discoveries, because the evidence they leave is indirect, are the concepts of number, of writing and of law. Of these, the rule of law and, probably, number date from the old stone age, while if writing in the full sense came only later, at least the urge to write can be detected as probably the earliest of all.

So when does history start? The answer that history starts when prehistory ends is uninformative and, when you look at it closely, untrue. The past is known most fully by the written word, but the remains of its artefacts can suggest the outline of a longer tale. Much of our knowledge of the earliest writing comes from the rubbish dumps of the prehistoric Sumerian city of Uruk where the inhabitants threw away the written tablets they no longer needed. Prehistory and history may merge into each other, but writing has to be described as a prehistoric invention if prehistory is defined, as it often is, as the age before writing. Merging apart, the end of prehistory is nowhere a straight line separating myth from fact. The invention of writing was a period lasting many centuries during which a script gradually emerged which could record language and be applied to an ever-widening range of new activities. Prehistory did not end all at once in all fields but was hesitatingly overtaken by written records in different fields at different times in different places. Accounting systems, for instance, ceased to be prehistoric in Uruk some seven centuries before written history appears.

The early city of Uruk consisted of a main urban centre surrounded by satellite villages or small towns. A little after 3500BC there was a dramatic growth in population which cannot be explained by natural increase, though no one can say who the immigrants were or where they came from. The main city centre expanded, public and ceremonial buildings grew; some of the satellite towns themselves acquired satellites as, in turn, did some of their satellites until the whole became a web of interdependent population centres – in administrative terms a conurbation. By about 3000BC the Uruk conurbation has been estimated at twenty-five to fifty thousand population and by 2800BC perhaps one hundred thousand – larger than Athens or Rome in their heyday. To hold all this together, to feed and defend the people, to plan and finance what on any scale was a major urban undertaking, a far more complex administration had to be created; and the technology on which it must rest could no longer be a system of information storage based largely on memory.

The new arrivals may well have been Sumerians and they may indeed have possessed a superior culture or ability, however politically incorrect that elitist idea may now seem. But their mere presence and the administrative crisis caused by a suddenly increased population would have been quite enough by themselves to set the storekeepers of Uruk searching for a solution to a predicament which threatened their craft, their livelihood and their status – and they were not long in finding one. They developed first a pictographic script and, soon after, added a phonetic element which was the real beginning of writing as the recording of language. These inventions produced immediately a script that could convey a full meaning to those who knew the circumstances, but it was many centuries before a script was to emerge which could be read accurately by strangers. Population pressure provided the impetus for the invention of writing, but intellect and creativity were needed to exploit it. Whether writing was invented by the original inhabitants or by the new arrivals, or whether indeed the new arrivals were a wave of the original population is unknown: but it is now established that a long-held belief is correct and that the language of the earliest tablets is Sumerian.

Writing can of course be said to have begun with the origin of the first process that was to lead to it: a sign which had a meaning and conveyed a message and which, more significantly, also reflected the beginning of a need to write. That could be the cave paintings of 35,000 years ago or, even earlier, signs to mark a route. The outline of a fish can decorate a jar, or it can indicate the jar's contents or ownership, though it is now impossible to say what significance was in fact attached to it. Pebbles may have been used for counting in the old stone age and clay tokens in the neolithic. All these can be seen as precursors of writing but they were not writing itself. Writing is more than isolated images, stone pebbles or clay tokens with meaning, because writing in the full sense can record a language.

Scripts that could record language, such as syllabaries or the alphabet, were the middle stages of a far longer evolution of recording systems which began with small stones and is far from ending with the computer. Numerical information necessary for community life may have been recorded and processed in the old stone age by arranging and counting pebbles, as implied by Nissen et al.; but from the beginning of the neolithic, about 8000BC, stones were gradually replaced by little moulded clay tokens. The progressive adoption of farming was producing agricultural supplies whose distribution needed to be controlled, as well as settlements whose future operations needed to be planned: small, deliberately shaped, tokens made these possible. As farming centres increased in size, manufactured goods including metals entered the economy, and tokens patterned with a pointed stylus were made and used; while from the shapes of tokens as well as from the patterns on them some of the earliest pictorial signs were derived.

Later precursors of writing abstracted from tokens the numerical and descriptive information they contained and wrote it on clay tablets, thus intellectualising it. That opened the way for the further development whereby pictures meaning things became ideographs meaning ideas. The last of the building blocks of a full script was in place about a century later when the phonetic principle was introduced so that cuneiform, partly ideographic and partly syllabic, could record language. Gradually, over centuries, writing released the past from the constraint of human memory and thereby enlarged the storehouse of knowledge, a prerequisite for the expansion of knowledge itself. The potential scale of human enterprise was multiplied; but in doing so, writing opened the way to deterioration by neglect of the faculty of human memory.

To the ancient mind in its own setting, time stretched infinitely backwards into the past as it did forwards into the future. The ancient records of past time were held in the living memory, taught by the old, learnt by the young, recited regularly and updated at intervals. The ancient world knew their own history with an objective accuracy more precise and more comprehensive than modern historians will generally allow, because their childhood training had developed the faculty of memory and taught them as second nature how to interpret and operate their memory systems. Most of the ancient memory systems died with those who knew them, but a few were partly written before their guardians had vanished. Of those, just one or two have survived by chance to tantalise the modern world with an expectation of mystery where the ancient world had recorded fact. Modern knowledge of those systems is necessarily derived from secondary and written sources that were, and are, open to contamination as memories held in living minds were not. Remnants of the ancient memory systems survive in the lists of ancestors in the Bible and in fragments of documents such as the Sumerian King List, whose numbers presented as lives or reigns are sometimes so impossibly large that modern scholarship cannot understand them and dismisses them as myth. Remnants of the techniques by which memories were stocked and information preserved survive in the doctrine of sacred writings and in the consequent insistence on precise, literal accuracy regardless of understanding or subsequent scholarship when a document is being copied or a record transmitted.

Memory is hard work. Like any other faculty it is strengthened by exercise and withers with disuse. What we underestimate is the crucial part played by memory in the thinking process. Memory is not just the storage and recall of fact, but the faculty which enables us to relate facts to each other and feed a coherent picture into our minds. Without memory there would be no thinking. Our ancestors over five thousand years ago began to transfer the contents of memory from the mind to tablets which, collectively, were a machine with greater capacity and more accurate recall. By relieving the pressure this threatened the faculty of memory by which alone mankind could use the information which writing gave him. In this sense, writing threatened to start a process of deterioration which in evolutionary terms could result, in time, in the destruction of our unique human intellectual capacity. That threat is more menacing today than it was in the ancient world because we are abandoning the practices designed to exercise memory which our ancestors maintained. There are some signs that the danger is now being felt, but no sign that what is felt intuitively is truly understood. In the ancient world, when memory was all they had, the danger of neglecting it was clear. Writing could not be halted nor would they have wished, or needed, to do so; but they did recognise that memory training was concerned with the preservation of intellect and they conducted their education systems accordingly. Memorising and precise copying were the basis of the scribal school (Eduba meaning tablet house) curriculum in Sumer and in its successors, Babylon and Assyria, as A.W. Sjoberg reveals when he quotes from an ancient tablet about the school curriculum:

The whole vocabulary of the scribes in the Eduba

I will recite for you, I know it much better than you.


Exercising the memory not only preserved their knowledge but kept their memories virile; and it was a practice whose roots lay far back in prehistory.

The origin of the city was once thought to lie in defence. More recent information suggests a different process. The old stone age – the golden age of hunting and gathering, the Garden of Eden – had its disciplined society, its laws, hierarchies, planning, trade and the arithmetic to support them; but its population was controlled by nature at a level which nature unaided was able to support. The old stone age did not have the means to sustain uncontrolled population increase. That changed around 8000BC with the discovery of farming and the arrival of the new stone age, or neolithic. From then on increases in population could be sustained by increasing agricultural production, apparently without limit. In a sense, the whole of subsequent history is the tale of how mankind has tried to adjust to the possibilities and the pressures thus released.

In the growing towns storage must have been a problem, so it is not surprising to find the temple precinct used for that purpose and the temple priests, as a result, playing a controlling part in the recording, storage and distribution of produce. Engraved stamp and cylinder seals impressed their designs on to clay to establish ownership. Temple buildings expanded, and to maintain the physical and administrative substructure of the growing towns an ominous measure of far-reaching significance appeared: taxation. The origins of a coercive but effective system of government for a city state may be traced to the way early municipal administrations reacted to population pressures in the late fourth millennium BC.

Religious experience and organised religion had long been central to personal and public life as the existence of temples in the earliest settlements and the number of surviving figurines make clear. Each later city, and probably each prehistoric settlement, had its patron or city god. The city god of Uruk was Inanna, Queen of Heaven and Goddess of Love, and her temple in Uruk was known as Eanna. The concept of a city god suggests the possibility that in the early cities economic as well as religious power may have been vested in the priesthood, a question which the incomplete records leave open. But the scale on which government had to be conducted in the growing cities and a possibly circumstantial origin of temple power must soon have caused a civil power to arise or, if already there, to separate. Surviving records indicate partnership rather than conflict between crown and temple. Political power rested, or came to rest, with the crown, but the temple owned and operated many, but not all, of the storehouses. It was in the storehouses that records and accounts were kept, and from the storehouses that their civil service keepers exercised power over the daily lives of citizens.


(Continues...)

Excerpted from Ancient Laws and Modern Problems by John Sassoon. Copyright © 2004 John Sassoon. Excerpted by permission of Intellect Ltd.
All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher.
Excerpts are provided by Dial-A-Book Inc. solely for the personal use of visitors to this web site.

Table of Contents

Contents

Introduction,
Acknowledgements,
Chapter 1. EMERGENCE FROM PREHISTORY,
Chapter 2. THE LAW CODES,
Chapter 3. THE BURDEN OF PROOF,
Chapter 4. THE CONCEPT OF PROPERTY,
Chapter 5. THE FAMILY AS PROPERTY,
Chapter 6. CHILDREN,
Chapter 7. ADOPTION,
Chapter 8. RAPE AND THE FAMILY,
Chapter 9. WOMEN ACCORDING TO THE LAWS,
Chapter 10. CRUELTY UNDER THE LAW,
Chapter 11. THE HAMMURABI MYSTERY,
Chapter 12. LAW IN THE ANCIENT WORLD,
Chapter 13. ANCIENT LAWS AND MODERN PROBLEMS: THREE PROBLEM PRINCIPLES,
Chapter 14. ANCIENT LAWS AND MODERN PROBLEMS: JUSTICE AND OTHER HAZARDS,
List of References,
Bibliography,
Index,

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