Each law consists of a potential case followed by a prescribed verdict. The verdicts could be very harsh indeed, and Columbia University professor Marc van de Mieroop notes in his book "King Hammurabi of Babylon" (Blackwell Publishing, 2005) that the death penalty is listed as punishment no fewer than 30 times. It was the punishment given even for “the theft of temple or palace property or when a runaway slave
is given refuge,” van de Mieroop writes.
Furthermore, the punishments ordered were by no means uniform but rather depended on the social status of the accused and the accuser. The punishments were only “eye for an eye” if the two individuals involved were socially equal.
Women could not necessarily expect equal treatment either. One law reads, “if a finger has been pointed at a man’s wife because of some male but she has not been caught copulating with another male, she shall leap into the River for the sake of her husband,” (translation by H. Dieter Viel).
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MARK AS BRAINLIEST
Women participated by boycotting British goods, producing goods for soldiers, spying on the British, and serving in the armed forces disguised as men. The war also affected the lives of women who remained loyal to the crown, or those who remained politically neutral; in many cases, the impact was devastating.Have a great day
An open college is usually open admissions. That means that so long as you have a HS diploma or GED, you will get in. They let in everyone who applies, basically.
A selective college gets so many applicants that they have to screen out those who don't meet certain standards, so for a selective college, you'd need to be in a certain GPA level and/or have an SAT or ACT score that falls into a certain range to get in. They admit only a certain percentage of those who apply.
100,000 centimeters in 1 kilometer