Les inégalités sociales en Mésopotamie : quelques précautions de vocabulaire

The Babylonian and Assyrian law collections have long been our only sources of information about the various Mesopotamian social groups. Several provisions from the Code of Hammurabi, the Laws of Eshnunna (18th century BCE) and the Middle Assyrian laws (12th century BCE) provide for punishments or d...

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Main Author: Sophie Démare-Lafont
Format: Article
Language:fra
Published: L’Harmattan 2015-04-01
Series:Droit et Cultures
Subjects:
Online Access:http://journals.openedition.org/droitcultures/3525
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spelling doaj-05c11bcbfb4846c5a09338bc7c8993bc2020-11-25T00:45:30ZfraL’HarmattanDroit et Cultures0247-97882109-94212015-04-01697587Les inégalités sociales en Mésopotamie : quelques précautions de vocabulaireSophie Démare-LafontThe Babylonian and Assyrian law collections have long been our only sources of information about the various Mesopotamian social groups. Several provisions from the Code of Hammurabi, the Laws of Eshnunna (18th century BCE) and the Middle Assyrian laws (12th century BCE) provide for punishments or damages in case of various offenses, the intensity of which varies according to the status or rank of the protagonists. Along with the classic distinction between free people and slaves as a basis for an assessement of the damage and of its sanction, a third and intermediate category has been added, formed by the so-called half-free persons named muškēnum in Babylonia and aššurāiau in Assyria. Their legal status and social condition have been analyzed in the light of the law collections, of other examples in Antiquity and of the slighting value of the French «mesquin», derived from the Babylonian muškēnum. Thanks to the new material published in the last twenty years, the hypothesis of a tripartite organization of the Babylonian and Assyrian societies has been dropped.http://journals.openedition.org/droitcultures/3525Free peopleHalf-free peopleInequalitiesSlavesSocial divisions
collection DOAJ
language fra
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Sophie Démare-Lafont
spellingShingle Sophie Démare-Lafont
Les inégalités sociales en Mésopotamie : quelques précautions de vocabulaire
Droit et Cultures
Free people
Half-free people
Inequalities
Slaves
Social divisions
author_facet Sophie Démare-Lafont
author_sort Sophie Démare-Lafont
title Les inégalités sociales en Mésopotamie : quelques précautions de vocabulaire
title_short Les inégalités sociales en Mésopotamie : quelques précautions de vocabulaire
title_full Les inégalités sociales en Mésopotamie : quelques précautions de vocabulaire
title_fullStr Les inégalités sociales en Mésopotamie : quelques précautions de vocabulaire
title_full_unstemmed Les inégalités sociales en Mésopotamie : quelques précautions de vocabulaire
title_sort les inégalités sociales en mésopotamie : quelques précautions de vocabulaire
publisher L’Harmattan
series Droit et Cultures
issn 0247-9788
2109-9421
publishDate 2015-04-01
description The Babylonian and Assyrian law collections have long been our only sources of information about the various Mesopotamian social groups. Several provisions from the Code of Hammurabi, the Laws of Eshnunna (18th century BCE) and the Middle Assyrian laws (12th century BCE) provide for punishments or damages in case of various offenses, the intensity of which varies according to the status or rank of the protagonists. Along with the classic distinction between free people and slaves as a basis for an assessement of the damage and of its sanction, a third and intermediate category has been added, formed by the so-called half-free persons named muškēnum in Babylonia and aššurāiau in Assyria. Their legal status and social condition have been analyzed in the light of the law collections, of other examples in Antiquity and of the slighting value of the French «mesquin», derived from the Babylonian muškēnum. Thanks to the new material published in the last twenty years, the hypothesis of a tripartite organization of the Babylonian and Assyrian societies has been dropped.
topic Free people
Half-free people
Inequalities
Slaves
Social divisions
url http://journals.openedition.org/droitcultures/3525
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