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The First Italian Marine Insurance Policies (c. 1300–1400 CE)

Event Date: c. 1300–1400 CE Category: Global Events & Geopolitics (Birth of Formal Insurance)

A 14th‑century map of Italy showing the major commercial cities—Genoa, Venice, Florence, and Pisa—whose merchants and notaries created the first true marine insurance policies. These urban centers dominated Mediterranean trade and became the birthplace of contractual risk transfer in the 1300s.

Summary

In the 14th century, merchants in Italian city‑states such as Genoa, Florence, and Venice began using written marine insurance contracts that included premiums, underwriters, indemnity clauses, exclusions, and defined perils. These are the earliest documents that match the structure of modern insurance policies. This moment marks the true birth of the insurance industry.

Background / Context

By the early 1300s, Italian maritime republics dominated Mediterranean trade. Their merchants financed:

Trade was profitable but dangerous. Merchants needed a way to:

Italian bankers and merchants synthesized:

The result was the first true insurance contract.

A handwritten medieval contract illustrating the dense script, formal clauses, and notarial structure common in late‑medieval Italy. Documents of this kind shaped the environment that produced the earliest marine insurance policies.

What Happened

1. The First Written Policies

The earliest surviving marine insurance policy is from Genoa, 1347. It contains:

This is unmistakably modern insurance.

2. Underwriters and Risk Pricing

Italian merchants introduced:

This is the birth of the underwriting profession.

3. Indemnity and Exclusions

Policies included:

These concepts survive unchanged in modern marine insurance.

4. Transferability and Negotiability

Policies could be:

This made insurance a financial instrument.

TIMELINE INSERT: The Oldest Insurance Contract in the World (Genoa, 1347)

The 1347 Genoa Marine Insurance Policy

The earliest surviving insurance contract in the world is a marine insurance policy dated 1347, preserved in the Archivio di Stato di Genova. It contains all the essential elements of modern insurance:

This is the documentary birth of the insurance industry.

Where Other Early Policies Survive

Although Genoa holds the oldest known policy, similar 14th‑century insurance artifacts survive in:

Archivio di Stato di Firenze (Florence)

Archivio di Stato di Venezia (Venice)

Biblioteca Nazionale Marciana (Venice)

Biblioteca Ambrosiana (Milan)

University Special Collections

Microfilm or facsimile copies appear at:

Together, these archives document the transition from risk‑sharing → contract‑based insurance.

Claims Impact

Italian policies created the first formal claims process:

This is the direct ancestor of modern claims adjustment.

Regulatory / Legal Impact

Italian city‑states developed:

These legal structures spread to:

They form the legal DNA of modern insurance regulation.

Market Impact

The introduction of formal insurance contracts enabled:

Insurance became a core financial tool of European commerce.

Why It Mattered

This event marks the birth of the insurance industry.

Italian marine insurance introduced:

Every modern insurance product — P&C, life, health, cyber — descends from these 14th‑century Italian policies.

Related Entries

Sources / Notes

 

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