known to belong to the Code from copies made for an Assyrian king in the seventh century b.c., are given here for the sake of completeness. They obviously come within the space once occupied by the five erased columns.

§ [X]. If a man has taken money from a merchant and has given a plantation of dates to the merchant, has said to him, ‘The dates that are in my plantation take for thy money,’ that merchant shall not agree, the dates that are in the plantation the owner of the plantation shall take, and he shall answer to the merchant for the money and its interests according to the tenour of his bond. The dates that are over, which are in the plantation, the owner of the plantation shall take forsooth.

§ [Y]. . . . the man dwelling (in the house) has given to the owner (of the house) the money of its rent in full for the year, the owner of the house has ordered the dweller to go out when his days are not full, the owner of the house, because he has ordered the dweller to leave when his days are not full,

(shall give) of the money which the dweller gave him. . . .

§ [Z]. If a man has to pay, in money or corn, but has not money or corn to pay with, but has goods, whatever is in his hands, before witnesses, according to what he has brought, he shall give to his merchant. The merchant shall not object, he shall receive it.

INDEX

The numbers refer to the sections of the Code.

Abatement, of rent, for loss of crop, [45], [46].
of interest, [48].

Accidental loss, by storm or deluge, falls on tenant, [a/][45].
shared by landlord, if before rent is paid, [a/][46].
by drought, storm, or deluge, postpones payment of debt, [a/][48].

Adjournment, for production of witnesses, [13].
not to exceed six months, [a/][13].