I. The Earliest Babylonian Laws
II. The Code Of ?ammurabi
III. Later Babylonian Law
IV. The Social Organization Of The Ancient Babylonian State
V. Judges, Law-Courts, And Legal Processes
VI. Legal Decisions
VII. Public Rights
VIII. Criminal Law
IX. The Family Organization
X. Courtship And Marriage
XI. Divorce And Desertion
XII. Rights Of Widows
XIII. Obligations And Rights Of Children
XIV. The Education And Early Life Of Children
XV. Adoption
XVI. Rights Of Inheritance
XVII. Slavery
XVIII. Land Tenure In Babylonia
XIX. The Army, CorvEe , And Other Claims For Personal Service
XX. The Functions And Organization Of The Temple
XXI. Donations And Bequests
XXII. Sales
XXIII. Loans And Deposits
XXIV. Pledges And Guarantees
XXV. Wages Of Hired Laborers
XXVI. Lease Of Property
XXVII. The Laws Of Trade
XXVIII. Partnership And Power Of Attorney
XXIX. Accounts And Business Documents
I. Letters And Letter-Writing Among The Babylonians And Assyrians
II. The Letters Of ?ammurabi
III. The Letters Of Samsu-Iluna And His Immediate Successors
IV. Private Letters Of The First Dynasty Of Babylon
V. Sennacherib's Letters To His Father, Sargon
VI. Letters From The Last Year Of Shamash-Shum-Ukin
VII. Letters Regarding Affairs In Southern Babylonia
Letters About Elam And Southern Babylonia
IX. Miscellaneous Assyrian Letters
X. Letters Of The Second Babylonian Empire
I. The Prologue And Epilogue To The Code Of ?ammurabi
II. Chronology
III. Weights And Measures
IV. Bibliography Of The Later Periods
Section 1.
Section 2.
Section 3.
Section 4.
Section 5.
Library of Ancient Inscriptions
Babylonian And Assyrian
Laws, Contracts and Letters
By
C. H. W. Johns, M.A.
Lecturer in Queens' College, Cambridge, and
King's College, London
New York
Charles Scribner's Sons
1904