textual error in code of kalantiaw
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The Code of Rajah Kalantiaw was a supposed legal code in the epic history Maragtas that is said to have been written in 1433 by Datu Kalantiaw, a chief on the island of Negros in the Philippines. The code is now believed by many historians to have been a hoax and that it had actually been written in 1913 by Jose E.
Despite the peculiarity and absurdity of the penal code of Kalantiaw, both Filipino and non-Filipino scholars immediately embraced it as a definitive source of existence of ancient Philippine legal system.
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Textual error in code of kalantiaw:
- Laws of the Kalantiaw Code say that - You must abide by the Kalantiaw Code's prohibitions on killing, stealing, and harming the elderly if you don't want to risk your life. Anyone who disobeys this instruction will be executed by drowning in a river or in boiling water.
- The Code of Rajah Kalantiaw, a purported legal code in the epic history of Maragtas, is credited to Datu Kalantiaw, a chief on the Philippine island of Negros, who is said to have created it in 1433. Many scholars now think that the code was a fraud and that Jose E. truly wrote the document in 1913.
- Despite the oddity and absurdity of the Kalantiaw penal code, researchers from the Philippines and elsewhere immediately welcomed it as a reliable source for the existence of the pre-Columbian Philippine legal system.
- Many historians today believe that the code was a fraud and that it was actually created in 1913 by Jose E. Marco as part of his historical novel Las Antiguas Leyenda de la Isla de Negros, which he claimed was the work of a priest by the name of Jose Maria Pavon.
- the Kalantiaw Code's laws. Cecilio Duka (2008) includes a complete recreation of the code in his book Struggle for Freedom so that the reader can "critically examine... to decide on its veracity and accuracy." To avoid the risk of dying, you must not kill, steal, or do harm on the elderly.
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