E ¶ 11

Epilogue ¶ 11 of Hammurabi's Code

Translation
Let any man oppressed, anyone who has a complaint, come before this statue of the king of justice and let him have the message on the stone read aloud, and let him listen to the treasured words I have written, and may my stela resolve his complaint, and may he understand his problem, and may he be content in his heart.
Section
Inscription

Cuneiform

Prologue ¶  - Cuneiform - Law Code of Hammurabi

Source: Bergmann (1953, p. 33–34, col. R XXV, lns. 3–19)

Transliteration

a-wi-lum ḫa-ab-lum ša a-wa-tam i-ra-aš-šu-u a-na ma-ḫa-ar ṣalmi-ia bšar mi-ša-ri-im li-il-ik-ma na-ru-i ša-aṭ-ra-am li-is-ta-baš-si-ma a-wa-ti-ia šu-ku-ra-tim li-iš-me-ma na-ru-i a-wa-tam li-kal-lim-šu di-in-šu bli-mu-ur li-ib-ba-šu li-na-ab-bi-iš-ma

Source: Harper (1904, p. 100)

Normalization

awīlum hablum, ša awatam iraššû ana maḫar ṣalmīya šar mīšarim lillikma, narî šaṭram lištassima awātiya šūqurātim lišmēma, narî awatam likallimšu dīnšu līmur, libbašu linappišma.

Source: Richardson (2004, p. 122)

Translation

Let any man oppressed, anyone who has a complaint, come before this statue of the king of justice and let him have the message on the stone read aloud, and let him listen to the treasured words I have written, and may my stela resolve his complaint, and may he understand his problem, and may he be content in his heart.

Source: Richardson (2004, p. 123)

Inscription

Location of Epilogue ¶ 11 · Powered by Stele3DSM

Orientation Back
Side(s) Side 4
Column(s) Col. 48
Line(s) Lns. 3–19
Key
Epilogue ¶ 11
Prologue
Laws
Epilogue
Damage

Citation

Dedović, B. "E ¶ 11 - eHammurabi." OMNIKA Foundation, 21 Aug. 2024, ehlaw.org/epilogue/11. [Accessed 15 Sep. 2024]

MLA 9

Dedović, B. (2024, August 21). E ¶ 11 - eHammurabi. OMNIKA Foundation. https://ehlaw.org/epilogue/11

APA 7

Dedović, Boban. "E ¶ 11 - eHammurabi." Las Vegas, NV: OMNIKA Foundation. Created August 21, 2024. Modified August 27, 2024. Accessed September 15, 2024. https://ehlaw.org/epilogue/11.

CMS 16

Bibliography

Abulhab, Saad D. The Law Code of Hammurabi: Transliterated and Literally Translated from its Early Classical Arabic Language. New York, NY: Blautopf, 2017.

ACH

Bergmann, Eugen. Codex Ḫammurabi: Textus Primigenius. Rome, Italy: Pontificium Institutum Biblicum, 1953.

CHTP

Huehnergard, John. A Grammar of Akkadian (Third Edition). Winona Lake, IN: Eisenbrauns, 2011.

HAG3

Huehnergard, John. Key to a Grammar of Akkadian (Third Edition). Winona Lake, IN: Eisenbrauns, 2013.

HKEY3

OMNIKA Foundation Contributors. "OMNIKA: Digital Mythology Library & Search Engine." Las Vegas, NV: OMNIKA Foundation, accessed November 14, 2023. https://omnika.org. [Visit]

Richardson, Mervyn E.J. Hammurabi's Laws: Text, Translation and Glossary. New York, NY: T & T Clark International, 2004.

RHL

Sound of Text Contributors. "Sound of Text: AI Text-to-Speech." Accessed November 14, 2023. https://soundoftext.app. [Visit]

SoT

eHammurabi Glossary

The § symbol commonly denotes "a shorthand notation for the word 'section'."

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eHammurabi Glossary

The term Cuneiform commonly means "an ancient writing system used by various cultures around Mesopotamia."

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eHammurabi Glossary

The term Normalization commonly means "the application of grammatical rules unto transliterated sound values."

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eHammurabi Glossary

The term Translation commonly means "the conversion of linguistic contents and their meanings from one language into another."

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eHammurabi Glossary

The term Transliteration commonly means "the conversion of sound values from one writing system into another."

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