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- Gage_(finance) abstract "In medieval finance, a gage could come in two forms: a mort-gage or a vif-gage. When the owner of property needed liquid resources, they could exchange their property, as a surety, for 'cash.' Since the gage was typically a piece of property which generated revenue (i.e. a farm which produced crops, a mill which processed food, a pasture that provided milk or wool, etc.), the creditor received the benefits of the land. Under the terms of a vifgage, these benefits reduced the amount the borrower owed, while under a mortgage they did not. This meant that if the property was prosperous enough, or the loan small enough, a property in vifgage could pay off the debt itself. On the other hand, with a mortgage, the benefits of the property constituted interest on the loan, which made it a form of usury. This meant that mortgages were seen as immoral/illegal among Catholic theologians.".
- Gage_(finance) wikiPageID "30468459".
- Gage_(finance) wikiPageRevisionID "578360900".
- Gage_(finance) hasPhotoCollection Gage_(finance).
- Gage_(finance) subject Category:Finance.
- Gage_(finance) comment "In medieval finance, a gage could come in two forms: a mort-gage or a vif-gage. When the owner of property needed liquid resources, they could exchange their property, as a surety, for 'cash.' Since the gage was typically a piece of property which generated revenue (i.e. a farm which produced crops, a mill which processed food, a pasture that provided milk or wool, etc.), the creditor received the benefits of the land.".
- Gage_(finance) label "Gage (finance)".
- Gage_(finance) sameAs m.0g5s75d.
- Gage_(finance) sameAs Q5516828.
- Gage_(finance) sameAs Q5516828.
- Gage_(finance) wasDerivedFrom Gage_(finance)?oldid=578360900.
- Gage_(finance) isPrimaryTopicOf Gage_(finance).