2006
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https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.13089/1odc
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Paul Dresch, « Assessing wrongs », Centre français de recherche de la péninsule Arabique
We are not told anywhere in our documents what the standard rate was for dīyah or full blood-money, and nineteenth-century accounts suggest the nominal sum being lowered arbitrarily in tribal practice. But a sensible guess would be of the order of 770 or 800 silver pieces. In text B section 14 the fine for shooting at a man without good reason is said to be 110 silver pieces, and doing so at truce, a worse offence by definition, is a quarter-dīyah: somewhere between 192, which is roughly a quarter...