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In page Margherita Guarducci:

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The inscription, part of a building used as the Odeon, is engraved on a concave wall about 8 m long and 175 cm high. It is grouped into twelve columns of boustrophedon writing. This is a type of writing that gradually alternates from left to right, writing a line backward, then reversing from right to left, for the entire text. It is likely that, on the left side of the wall, there were eight other columns which are now lost.[citation needed] This is not a real "code of laws," but rather, with the Latin, a satura legum, i.e., a sparse collection of laws, updates of previous ancient laws, and new laws focused on a specific topic.[citation needed] In the case of the Gortyn Code, the laws shown are mostly family law, as well as regarding economics and commerce.