Founding Documents and Political
Philosophers
Hammurabi’s Code
The Code of Hammurabi was the law code of Ancient Babylon.
Established a single, uniform code of law for the entire empire.
The code is the first example of fundamental laws unchangeable even by a King
The Ten Commandments
According to the Bible, Moses received the Ten Commandments from God
In Biblical times, the Bible served as the source of law for the Hebrews of Palestine.
The Commandments’ simple instructions on how individuals must behave toward one another are seen to form the basis of all Western law.
The Contribution of the Greeks
First to believe that laws were a human institution (not dictated by the Gods)
Allowed common people to serve in state office
First government in which elected officials were paid a salary
Had the first trial by jury in recorded history
Every male citizen had the right to serve in the assembly, which passed laws and determined government policies.
The Influence of Ancient
Rome
The Senate, a REPRESENTATIVE body was the most powerful government body.
The Senate conducted foreign policy, passed laws and handled the government’s finances.
The Romans also believed in NATURAL LAW, the idea that certain basic rights should be extended to everybody who lived under Roman rule.
Divine Right of Kings Throughout the Middle
Ages, the concept of the “Divine Right of Kings” was generally accepted
It held that the King was chosen by God because the King was speaking
for God, everything he says is absolutely right…
Because why would God choose a King that was capable of making poor choices?
Magna Carta 1215
First attempt at a Social Contract
Provides the basic principle of limited government
Introduced the idea of fundamental rights (which can’t be taken away) Trial by jury, due process, protection
against unjust punishment, and loss of life, liberty and property
Petition of Right1628
Put limits on the
power of the King
Must work with the consent of Parliament (representatives of people)
Outlines basic rights for individuals (no tax w/o representation, no imprisonment w/o
cause, no housing soldiers, no use of martial law during peace)
English Bill of Rights1689
Placed clear limits on the absolute monarchy Written by Parliament Signed by King William &
Queen Mary Provided for individual
protections (with many of the rights found now found in the Constitution)
Limits Established by the English Bill of Rights
Monarchs DO NOT have absolute power—they must rule with the consent of the peoples’ representatives in Parliament…
The monarch cannot suspend laws, raise taxes or maintain an army without Parliamentary consent…
The monarch cannot interfere with the business of Parliament…
The people have the right to a fair and speedy trial (Habeas Corpus).
The people will not be subjected to cruel and unusual punishments or excessive fines and bail.
Hobbes Wrote Leviathan
Father of Natural Rights State of nature is “nasty, brutish and short” and only
the strong survive.
First to introduce social contract theory Citizens surrender liberty to the government in
exchange for protection from chaos Focused on individual freedoms with some protection
from the government
Locke Wrote Two Treatises of Government
Natural Rights Born free, equal and independent
Social Contract Government that didn’t protect
essential rights to life, liberty and property could be changed
Popular Sovereignty
Montesquie
Wrote The Spirit of Laws
Limited Government Separation of Powers
Legislative, Executive, Judicial Checks and Balances
Top Related