The laws of psychis it already existed it just needed psychiscits
To write them down.
Hammurabi's Code is the earliest set of know written laws.
England
The very first set of written laws in human history was the Code of Hammurabi.
The earliest known written laws can be traced back to ancient Mesopotamia, with examples such as the Code of Hammurabi in Babylon around 1754 BC. These laws were inscribed on stone monuments or clay tablets to establish rules for society. Written laws eventually spread to other ancient civilizations like Egypt, Greece, and Rome.
They were the earliest known building codes
the Hammurabi code is one of the earliest recorded laws, wrote by the Babylonian Empire
W. Dray has written: 'Laws and explanations in history'
The earliest known code of law was the Hammurabi code. It was the first laws codified together.
Hammurabi's Code [APEX]
Darius has not gone down in history as a lawmaker. But Persia during his reign had a system of laws based on Hammurabi's earlier Mesopotamian code, that had "King's laws" that were valid for the whole nation next to local laws and customs. The only set of laws that Darius ever ordered was a codification of the laws of Egypt. The basis here remained the ancient Egyptian laws and customs themselves that for the most part had never been properly codified.
Yes, ancient China had written laws, with one of the earliest examples being the legalist reforms during the Qin Dynasty (221-206 BCE). These laws were codified and recorded to establish a centralized legal system that aimed to maintain order and control. Prior to this, various dynasties had their own sets of rules and regulations, often inscribed on bamboo slips or silk. The written laws evolved over time, influencing governance and social order throughout Chinese history.
It was written on a black stone and hade 282 laws.