Amicable Society, The charters, acts of Parliament, and by-laws of the corporation of the Amicable Society for a perpetual assurance office, Gilbert and Rivington, 1854, p | , 1997, Risk Management, New York: Wiley |
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Anzovin, Steven, Famous First Facts 2000, item 2422, H | Insurance Regulation in the United States: Regulatory Federalism and the National Association of Insurance Commissioners; Susan Randall; Florida State University Law Review, Vol |
121 The first life insurance company known of record was founded in 1706 by the Bishop of Oxford and the financier Thomas Allen in London, England.
The company, called the Amicable Society for a Perpetual Assurance Office, collected annual premiums from policyholders and paid the nominees of deceased members from a common fund | Gilbert, British social policy, 1914-1939 1970• Histoire des Institutions D'Assurance en France |
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Oxford Dictionary of National Biography | Franklin, The Science of Conjecture: Evidence and Probability Before Pascal Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press, 2001 , 274-277 |
The Journal of Risk and Insurance.
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