The ten commandments is generally considered the core of what has become known as Mosaic Law. Mosaic Law is God centered: the central thought is that to break one of the 10 commandments is an affront to God and constitutes a sin not of a civil nature (as with the Hammurabi code), but a deeply spiritual and religious code.
People have lived by the laws of Moses (and their all encompassing simplicity) for 3000 years, and although Hammurabi is older, it is less central. The idea of Hammurabi is that of punishment which is an eye for an eye and a tooth for a tooth. What is taken illegally must be returned. The Ten Commandments are less concerned with punishment than with conducting a good and dutiful life. The Law (as the New Testament calls it) has to do with behavior and obedience which leads to righteousness. Punishment is sometimes spoken of, but most of the time it is about how God expects us to live a life that is beyond reproach.
France became an independent country in the ninth century. It was originally called Gaul and controlled by the Celts. The Romans took control of Gaul in the first century<span> B.C. After the fall of Rome, Germanic tribes known as the Franks conquered the area in the </span>fifth century<span> A.D.</span>
Answer:
Following the Civil War, plantation owners were unable to farm their land. They did not have slaves or money to pay a free labor force, so sharecropping developed as a system that could benefit plantation owners and former slaves.
Explanation:
After the Civil War, former slaves sought jobs, and planters sought laborers. The absence of cash or an independent credit system led to the creation of sharecropping. ... The Great Depression, mechanization, and other factors lead sharecropping to fade away in the 1940s.
You follow the governments laws on a daily basis you follow their regulations on a daily basis you use their public services on a daily basis