Djehuty

Djehuty (also known as Thuti and Thutii) was a general under the ancient Egyptian king Thutmose III (reigned 1479–1425 BC) in the 18th Dynasty. He is known as the main hero of the tale of “The Taking of Joppa“. Djehuty bears the titles king’s scribeoverseer of troops (general) and overseer of the northern foreign countries in contemporary Egyptian records.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Djehuty_(general)

nom de guerre

a fictitious name used when the person performs a particular social role. anonym, pseudonym. name – a language unit by which a person or thing is known; “his name really is George Washington”; “those are two names for the same thing”

Brands: Colored, Nigger, African American, Negro, Black, Indian, Latino, Ethiopian

Codes Noir = Black Code’s Cattle = Chattel Chatle
Human Trafficking

Living off your virtues

virtue (n.)

c. 1200, vertu, “moral life and conduct; a particular moral excellence,” from Anglo-French and Old French vertu “force, strength, vigor; moral strength; qualities, abilities” (10c. in Old French), from Latin virtutem (nominative virtus) “moral strength, high character, goodness; manliness; valor, bravery, courage (in war); excellence, worth,” from vir “man” (from PIE root *wi-ro- “man”).

For my part I honour with the name of virtue the habit of acting in a way troublesome to oneself and useful to others. [Stendhal “de l’Amour,” 1822]

Especially (in women) “chastity, sexual purity” from 1590s. Phrase by virtue of (early 13c.) preserves alternative Middle English sense of “efficacy.” Wyclif Bible has virtue where KJV uses power. The seven cardinal virtues (early 14c.) were divided into the natural (justice, prudence, temperance, fortitude) and the theological (hope, faith, charity). To make a virtue of a necessity (late 14c.) translates Latin facere de necessitate virtutem [Jerome].

escheatment

What is the right of escheat?The term escheatment refers to the process of turning custody of abandoned assets or accounts over to a state authority

BOTTOMRY BOND

The instrument embodying the contract or agreement of bottomry. The true definition of a bottomry bond, in the sense of the general maritime law, and independent of the peculiar regulations of the positive codes of different commercial nations, is that it is a contract for a loan of money on the bottom of the ship, at an extraordinary interest, upon maritime risks, to be borne by l he lender for a vovage. or for a definite period. The Draco, 2 Sumn. 157, Fed. Cas. No. 4,057; Cole v. White. 26 Wend. (N. Y.) 515; Greely v Smith, 10 Fed. Cas. 1077; The Grapeshot, 9 Wall. 135, 19 L. Ed. 651.