-.- The Ancient Egyptians did not hang people. The usual punishment for tomb raiding was actually impalement by a stake. In that, a person would be forced onto a stake. It they were lucky the initial entry might have been through one of the main organs and would mean that they would die quickly. If it did not pierce a main organ, the victim would die painfully and slowly.
Imprisonment, fines and community service would be the common punishments for breaking laws in Ireland.
There were many laws in Egypt as there were many punishments for breaking a law. One of the punishments was one hundred strokes of a cane and if the crime was worse five bleeding cuts were added. Other punishments included branding, exile, mutilation, drowning, beheading, and burning alive.
It depends on how bad you broke the law. There is many consequences for breaking the law like: Jail, community service, probation. For example if you did something bad enough to go to jail like murder someone you may be sentenced to life.
The DMCA did not affect the punishments for infringement laid out in the existing copyright law. Fines range from $750 to $30,000 per infringement, and in extreme cases may include five years in prison.
It obviously depends which 'rules' were broken.
Oklahoma amended its gun law effective November 2012. Wikipedia has a good summary of it in an article titled "Gun Laws in Oklahoma."
the power of such a ruler differ from that of a Constitutional monarch like queen Elizabeth of great Britain for example a ruler from Egypt called a Pharaoh rules the country and give them punishments. but the queen in Egypt didn't do anything. Queen Elizabeth rules the country/state and don't give them punishments. in Egypt they give them cruel punishments vs queen Elizabeth don't give cruel punishments they didn't have rules in Egypt until they picked a Pharaoh and they made a code of Hammurabi.
Whipping, imprisonment with no access to food or water, abandoning in the desert, and/or removal of a limb are all common punishments in BC times.
The Aztecs had a complex legal system based on social hierarchies and religious beliefs. They had laws governing property rights, marriage, inheritance, and crimes. Punishments for breaking the law included fines, slavery, or even death, depending on the severity of the offense.
The Judge decides punishments within guidelines established by law, rule, or administrative procedure.
Breaking the Law was created in 1980-01.
obey the law