Humanity Against Cruelty to Animals in Historical Literature, Timeline of Animal Rights History

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Laws of Manu

The Laws of Manu, although did not denounce meat eating or sacrifice as sinful, does conclude that the only way to obtain "great rewards" including "endless" (5:46), "heavenly bliss" (5:48 ) and freedom from disease is by "abstaining entirely from the use of meat" which is both "cruel" and "disgusting" (5:49). Manu's laws also condemn those who permit slaughter, as well as those who buy, sell, cook, serve or eat meat, acknowledging them as responsible for the slaughter as the one who actually killed the animal (5:51). Thought composed between 200 AD and 200 BC, Scholars now agree that the Manava Dharma-sastra is an "amplified recast in verse of a Dharma-sutra, no longer extant, that may have been in existence as early as 500 B.C.," credited with "divine origin and a remote antiquity…it's reputed author Manu, the mythical survivor of the Flood and father of the human race" by the Brahmins themselves (Catholic Encyclopedia Online, s.v. "Manu, The Laws of") .








Links to the Primary Source
document the authenticity of quotations while providing more in-depth insight into the ideologies of humanity against cruelty to animals and additional historical perspective on the continuing struggle for animal rights, animal welfare and the protection of animals.

The Laws of Manu, Translated by George Buhler, Vol. 25 of The Sacred Books of the East (Oxford, 1884; Online at Sacret-Texts.com)

Catholic Encyclopedia, 1910 ed., s.v. "Manu, The Laws of"

Quotes briefly introduce animal rights activists, animal welfare advocates and authors; the history of animal rights, animal welfare and animal protection; and the literature of the humane movement against cruelty to animals.

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Before the Common Era (BC)
c28-11,000 BCE Cave Paintings
Mythical & Divine Origin:
Manu, Triptolemus
Ancient ReligionsJainism,
Historic India—The doctrines of
Ahimsa & Vegetarianism evolve.
[621 BCE] Draco
[8th Century BCE] Hesiod
[c599-510 BCE] Siddhartha, Sakyamuni Buddha
[c599-527 BCE] Mahavira
[c552-496 BCE] Pythagoras
[c484-425 BCE] Herodotus
[c450 BCE] Empedocles
[c396-314 BCE] Xenocrates
[d. 276 BCE] Polemon
[c273-232 BCE] King Asoka
[106-43 BCE] Cicero
[ca99-55 BCE] Lucretius
[1st c. BCE] Quintus Sextius
[c70-19 BCE] Virgil
Ancient Animal Rights Law
[ca273-232BCE] King Ashoka
Common Era (AD)
[c43BCE-17] Ovid
[1st century] Sotion
[c4 BCE-65] Seneca
[c23-79] Pliny the Elder
[ca46-120] Plutarch
[d. ca215] Clement of Alexandria
[2nd or 3rd c.] Sextus Empiricus
[c160-230] Tertullian
[c204-270] Plotinus
[ca245-305]Porphyry
[c347-407]St. Chrysostom
[c570-632] Muhammad
[c1181-1226] St. Francis Assisi


Antiquity, Ancient Animal Rights Law &The Middle Ages

Renaissance & Early Anti-Cruelty Legislation

Age of Enlightenment

Romanticism, Modern Legislative Beginnings

Victorian Age, Anti-Vivisection & the Early 20th Century

Periodicals, Articles, Letters, Reviews


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