Joel-Oskar

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In the ancient world, merchants employed a primitive form of insurance called bottomry. (The Romans knew it as foenus nauticum, or maritime interest.) In simple terms, a captain borrowed money for a voyage, repaying it with interest only if the passage was successful. Otherwise, the lender wrote off the loan. The ship served as collateral.
Dead in the Water: Murder and Fraud in the World's Most Secretive Industry
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