Ashurbanipal

Hammurabi

Hammurabi was king of Babylon from about 1792 to 1750 BCE. He conquered much of Mesopotamia and issued the famous Code of Hammurabi, one of the best preserved law codes of the ancient world.

Born
1810 BCE
Died
1750 BCE
Role
Babylonian king

Babylonian king (1810 BC–1750 BC)

Portrait of Hammurabi in ancient Babylonian royal attire
Facts

Hammurabi timeline facts

Selected specifics from this profile's life story.

c.1810 BCE
Royal beginnings

Hammurabi was born into the Amorite dynasty of Babylon, a city with potential but not yet the commanding power it later became under his rule.

1760s BCE
Military expansion

In the later part of his reign, Hammurabi defeated major rivals including Larsa, Eshnunna, Mari, and others, making Babylon the leading power in Mesopotamia.

1750s BCE
Height of power

At his height, Hammurabi ruled much of Mesopotamia, but his empire depended on constant management of water, labour, taxes, trade, temples, and loyalty.

after 1750 BCE
Enduring influence

Hammurabi's empire weakened after his death, but his law code became one of history's most famous witnesses to early kingship, justice, and written authority.

Life Journey

A reign that shaped law and order

Follow the story in a more continuous narrative, with a reading mode that matches how much depth you want.

c.1810 BCE

Royal beginnings

Hammurabi was born into the Amorite dynasty of Babylon, a city with potential but not yet the commanding power it later became under his rule.

c.1792 BCE

Ascending the throne

Hammurabi became king around 1792 BCE and spent his early reign strengthening Babylon's temples, walls, canals, administration, and diplomatic position.

1780s BCE

Strategic alliances

Before conquering rivals, Hammurabi survived among them, using treaties, temporary alliances, letters, and calculated loyalty to keep Babylon in the game.

1760s BCE

Military expansion

In the later part of his reign, Hammurabi defeated major rivals including Larsa, Eshnunna, Mari, and others, making Babylon the leading power in Mesopotamia.

mid-1700s BCE

Unifying the realm

After victory, Hammurabi had to govern cities with their own gods, scribes, traditions, property claims, debts, merchants, soldiers, and local elites.

c.1754 BCE

The law code

The Code of Hammurabi, probably issued late in his reign, set out nearly three hundred rulings on property, debt, injury, family, labour, wages, status, and justice.

1750s BCE

Height of power

At his height, Hammurabi ruled much of Mesopotamia, but his empire depended on constant management of water, labour, taxes, trade, temples, and loyalty.

late reign

Later years

Hammurabi's later years were dominated by the challenge every conqueror faces: keeping together a realm that had grown faster than its institutions could comfortably hold.

after 1750 BCE

Enduring influence

Hammurabi's empire weakened after his death, but his law code became one of history's most famous witnesses to early kingship, justice, and written authority.

Continue in context

Connected stories

Move from the profile into the wider events and settings this figure belongs to.

Tertiary paths

Content note

This profile is written for educational use and connects to related Stories of History pages. Illustrations are original artistic interpretations.

References

Sources & Further Reading

Reliable reference works, archives and reading paths connected to this profile.

Further reading

  1. Encyclopaedia Britannica, Search results for Hammurabi,” accessed June 2026.Open source
  2. WorldCat, Books and library holdings for Hammurabi,” accessed June 2026.Open source

Primary sources

  1. Library of Congress, Search results for Hammurabi,” accessed June 2026.Open source

A weekly route through history

Find out first about the latest published stories, feature notes and occasional Premium offers in one weekly email.