Latin: In the civil law. A word having various meanings; e. p., an assembly, society, or company; a body of bishops; an army; a class of men. But the principal idea of the word was that of an association of individuals of the same rank and station, or united for the pursuit of some business or enterprise. Sometimes, a corporation, as in the maxim “tree faciunt collegium” (1 Bl. Comm. 469), though the more usual and proper designation of a corporation was “unlversitas. Collegium ammiralitatis. The college or society of the admiralty. Collegium illicitom. One which abused its right, or assembled for any other purpose than that expressed in its charter. Collegium licltnm. An assemblage or society of men united for some useful purpose or business, with power to act like a single individual. 2 Kent Comm. 269. Collegium est societas plurium corporum simul habitantium. Jenk. Cent 229. A college is a society of several persons dwelling together.
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