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College (corporation)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

A college is a variety of the corporation, literally a "body" (Latin: corpus, corporis) created by a legal fiction with its own legal personality, able to act largely as a natural person as regards the law of contract. Thus it can enter into contracts for sale, purchase and employment and can sue and be sued in a court of law, and can own real estate.

Etymology

The word "college" is contracted from the Latin compound word cum-lego, from the verb lego, legere, legi, lectum, "to collect, gather together, pick", plus the preposition cum, "with",[1] thus meaning "selected together". Thus "colleagues" are fellow members of a college, literally "persons who have been selected together". In ancient Rome a collegium was a "body, guild, corporation united in colleagueship; of magistrates, praetors, tribunes, priests, augurs; a political club or trade guild".[2]

Examples

Mediaeval

  • Colleges of priests. In mediaeval England there were colleges of priests, for example in chantry chapels, which were financed by a trust fund, usually established by the will of the deceased, for the purpose of singing masses to speed the soul of the deceased through purgatory;

Modern survivals

The following are all groups of persons "selected in common" to perform a specified function and appointed by a monarch, founder or other person in authority:

See also

References

  1. ^ Cassell's Latin Dictionary, Marchant, J.R.V, & Charles, Joseph F., (Eds.), Revised Edition, 1928: lego; colligo
  2. ^ Cassell's Latin Dictionary, Marchant, J.R.V, & Charles, Joseph F., (Eds.), Revised Edition, 1928, p.107
  3. ^ Cust, Lionel, History of Eton College, 1899, p.5
This page was last edited on 17 May 2023, at 14:59
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