Hammurabi's Code
Declaration of Human Rights
Vocabulary
4 Empires of Mesopotamia
Edict of Milan
100

This ancient Mesopotamian king is famous for creating one of the world’s oldest written law codes.

Who is Hammurabi?

100

This international organization adopted the Universal Declaration of Human Rights in 1948.

What is the United Nations?

100

This word describes a system where people or things are ranked from highest to lowest, like levels on a ladder.

What is a hierarchy?

100

This empire, led by Sargon the Great, is considered the first empire in world history.

What is the Akkadian Empire?

100

Issued in A.D. 313, the Edict of Milan made this religion legal in the Roman Empire.

What is Christianity?

200

Hammurabi’s Code was carved into this tall, stone monument so everyone could read the laws.

What is a stele?

200

The UDHR states that all people are born with these, which cannot be taken away.

What are human rights?

200

When everyone follows the same rules, measurements, or procedures so things match or work together, this process is happening.

What is standardization?

200

This Mesopotamian empire is famous for its king Hammurabi, who created one of the world’s earliest written law codes.

What is the Babylonian Empire?

200

This Roman emperor, who later converted to Christianity, helped issue the Edict of Milan.

Who is Constantine?

300

This short phrase, often linked to Hammurabi’s Code, describes its principle of equal punishment, such as “an eye for an eye.”

What is “lex talionis” or the law of retaliation?

300

This former First Lady of the United States chaired the committee that drafted the UDHR.

Who is Eleanor Roosevelt?

300

Hammurabi did this when he wrote laws down so everyone could see them—turning rules into an organized written system.

What is codification?

300

Known for its strong army and advanced iron weapons, this empire ruled Mesopotamia with strict control from its capital at Nineveh.

What is the Assyrian Empire?

300

Instead of forcing people to follow one religion, the Edict of Milan guaranteed this right for all citizens.

What is freedom of religion?

400

Hammurabi’s Code helped keep order by doing this—something modern laws still do—explaining the consequences for breaking rules.

What is setting clear punishments?
(Also acceptable: “What is maintaining justice?”)

400

Article 19 of the UDHR protects this freedom, which allows people to share their ideas without fear.

What is freedom of expression?

400

This Latin phrase protects people from being jailed without being told why and without a fair chance to challenge it.

What is habeas corpus?

400

King Nebuchadnezzar II rebuilt Babylon and may have created the legendary Hanging Gardens during this later empire.

What is the Neo-Babylonian Empire?

400

The Edict of Milan required that property taken from Christians during persecutions be given back. This process is known as this.

What is restitution?

500

Hammurabi claimed his laws came from this Babylonian god of justice, whose image appears at the top of the Code’s stele.

Who is Shamash?

500

The UDHR is not a law but this type of document, meaning it sets important standards and goals for nations around the world.

What is a declaration?

500

hese two Latin terms describe how something might exist “in practice” versus “in law,” even if the two don’t match.

What are de facto and de jure?

500

This empire lasted the longest of the four Mesopotamian empires and was known for its network of roads and harsh military tactics.

What is the Assyrian Empire?

500

Though often credited to Constantine, this co-emperor of the eastern Roman Empire also signed the Edict of Milan.

Who is Licinius?

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