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A bottomry, or bottomage, is an arrangement in which the master of a ship borrows money upon the ''bottom'' or keel of it, so as to forfeit the ship itself to the creditor, if the money with interest is not paid at the time appointed at the ship's safe return. This occurs, for example, where the ship needs urgent repairs during the course of its voyage or some other emergency arises and it is not possible for the master to contact the owner to arrange funds, allowing the master to borrow money on the security of the ship or the cargo by executing a bond. Where the ship is hypothecated, the bond is called a bottomry bond. Where both the ship and its cargo are hypothecated, the relationship is called respondentia. Due to the bottomry bond's relatively low priority as against other liens in the event of a libel against the ship, the use of bottomry bonds declined greatly in the 19th century and the subject is today of interest only to legal historians. The Code of Hammurabi describes a form of bottomry that was a type of insurance. A bottomry would be taken, but the repayment would be contingent on the ship successfully completing the voyage. In his ''Life of Cato the Elder'', Plutarch describes how he would use the process to make money, but calls it "the most disreputable form of money-lending."〔Cato, c. 21, in Waterfield, Robin. ''Plutarch, Roman Lives''. ISBN 978-0-19-282502-5〕 Kaplan and Kaplan describe it as follows: ==Respondentia== Respondentia is a loan where a ship's cargo is the security, on similar terms to bottomry.〔(The Free Dictionary )〕 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「Bottomry」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
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