Laws provide were and still are needed to establish rules which regulate the life of a community. It sets rules for the punishment of crime and for the regulation of civil life: private law (which covers things such as marriage, inheritance, property, contract, and arbitration laws) and public law which deals with matters which are common to the community and the relationship between public office and private individuals. Laws also provide a framework for the administration of the state by rulers.
Yes because we need a good civilization :)
I think so. Especially in history classes where you need synonyms for cities, towns, etc. If you mean civilization as in the human race, then no.
Cradle of civilization means the place where civilization began to flourish. Civilization was able to thrive because it had what it needed.
Civilization is both countable and uncountable. Civilizations is the plural inflection of the noun civilization
The Mayan civilization!
Yes the Romans did invent laws They invented their laws but laws had been around for thousands of years before.
There were 282 laws there
There were 289 laws in Mesopotamia. Set by King Hammurabi.
laws
The first known written laws were created by the ancient Sumerians in Mesopotamia, around 2100-2050 BCE. These laws are known as the Code of Ur-Nammu.
The Greco-Roman civilization is important to our civilization because it is the basis for our western thinking, ideals, and laws.
Not sure if this answer is totally correct but the Israelite or Jews are an ancient civilization that based its laws on God...
so the civilization would function properly
So we can tell the 'civilized' from the 'uncivilized'.
Yes, all of his laws are very like the laws of Hallah Walla
Hammurabi's code of laws.
We could start by the first code of laws in existence.