obviously you wouldn't want to mention them, since they have no parallel in the Ten Commandments......nothing about other gods, nothing about idols.....nothing about Sabbaths or parents....nothing about coveting......monetary compensation instead of prohibition for lying or adultery.......
guess all you can say about Nammu is that he was against killing and stealing.....Hammurabi has even less to compare.....
LOL! The MORTAL King of Kings in those days wanted TOTAL worship. Back in those days you bowed to kings. Not to statues. Therefore they wanted you to serve no other king. Idols? The new kings would not allow old ancestral worship and would demand total loyalty from it's newly conquered citizens. Statues usually representing honored ancestors were usually destroyed so as to stop future revolts in their names.
Actually look at the laws. There is something about coveting. Why don't you research all the Laws that were known at the time. Some requested compensation, others death. You will see. There is noting supernatural about the laws of the god of the jews.lol
Remember eye for an eye?
Leviticus 24:19-21
19 If a man injures his neighbor, just as he has done, so it shall be done to him: 20 fracture for fracture, eye for eye, tooth for tooth; just as he has injured a man, so it shall be inflicted on him. 21 Thus the one who kills an animal shall make it good, but the one who kills a man shall be put to death.
Code of Hammurabi.
Law #196. "If a man destroy the eye of another man, they shall destroy his eye. If one break a man's bone, they shall break his bone. If one destroy the eye of a freeman or break the bone of a freeman he shall pay one mana of silver. If one destroy the eye of a man's slave or break a bone of a man's slave he shall pay one-half his price."
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Urukagina
Urukagina's code has been widely hailed as the first recorded example of government reform, seeking to achieve a higher level of freedom and equality It limited the power of the priesthood and large property owners, and took measures against usury, burdensome controls, hunger, theft, murder, and seizure (of people's property and persons); as he states,
"The widow and the orphan were no longer at the mercy of the powerful man".