Origin and context
The Tang code took its roots in the code of theOrganization and system of punishments
French historian and sinologist Jacques Gernet has called the ''Tang Code'' "an admirable composition of faultless logic in spite of its size and complexity." The American sinologists Wallace Johnson and Denis C. Twitchett described it as "a very rational system of justice" in which "both the accuser and the officials involved had to be careful lest they themselves face punishment". The ''Tang Code'' contained more than 500 articles divided into twelve large sections (see right-side table). The penalty for an offence was determined according to two factors: * Offence : The Tang Code clearly associated each offence with a penalty. * Relational position : For relatives, this position was measured by the kind and duration of mourning that had to be observed for each degree of kinship. Relations outside the family were defined according to positions in a social hierarchy capped by the emperor himself. In this hierarchy, officials were higher than ordinary men, who were themselves superior to persons of servile status. For instance, a slave committing a crime against his master was punished more severely than if an ordinary person had committed the same crime. The same offence committed by the master against his slave, on the other hand, resulted in a ''lower'' penalty than the same crime committed by a common person. The local magistrate acted as examiner and sometimes as investigator, but his final role in legal cases was to determine the proper penalty for the offense that had been committed: he had to fix the nature of the offense as defined by the code, and to increase or reduce the associated penalty depending on the social relation between offender and victim. The historically famous 'five hearings' was a Chinese technique for eliciting the facts of a case. While questioning a witness, the magistrate would look closely for five kinds of behavior: "the person's statements, expression, breathing, reaction to the words of the judge, and eyes. Through careful observation, it was thought that the experienced magistrate could arrive at a knowledge of whether the person was, in fact, telling the truth." If a magistrate was unable to decide a case on the basis of evidence and witness testimony, he could seek the permission of higher officials to use judicial torture. The accused could be beaten no more than 200 blows in up to three interrogations held at least twenty days apart. But when the accused was able to withstand the full amount of torture without making a confession, the magistrate would use the same torture on the accuser. If the tortured accuser admitted making a false accusation, he would receive the same punishment that would have been inflicted upon the accused had this latter been convicted. The offence modulated according to the degree of social relation determined the final penalty which could range from flagellation using aFacts
* The code imposed two years of forced labor on any private household found in possession of such works as the '' Luoshu Square'' or the '' Yellow River Map'', which are used in '' Yijing'' and '' Fengshui'' divination. The practice was preserved in the legal practice until the Song dynasty. *Specific rules governed the application of judicialSee also
* Great Qing Legal CodeNotes
Bibliography
*{{citation, last=Gernet, first=Jacques, year=1996, url=https://books.google.com/books?id=jqb7L-pKCV8C, title=A History of Chinese Civilization, edition=Second, publisher=Cambridge, England: Cambridge University Press, pages=801 pages, isbn=9780521497817 Originally published in French as ''Le monde chinois''. *Johnson, Wallace, trans. (1979), ''The Tang Code: Volume One: General Principles''. Princeton: Princeton University Press. *Johnson, Wallace and Denis Twitchett (1993), "Criminal Procedure in T'ang China", ''Asia Major'' 3rd series, 6.2, 113–146. Legal codes Legal history of China Tang dynasty literature 7th century in law