Municipia cum suffragio had, outside of their political and civil rights, the important right of voting[33] at Rome.
It would have been easy for a person in the compass of a few miles to find villages having the jus Latii, others with simply the jus Italicum, colonies, prefectures, municipia cum et sine suffragio.
For though such of them as belonged to Roman colonies or municipia possessed the franchise already, the mass of the Latins and Italians did not possess it.
Praefectura was the generic name for Roman colonies and for all Municipia to which prefects were sent annually to administer justice.
Old Latin towns except such as had been made Municipia b.
He was well received by the municipia which lay between Vibo and Brundusium.
The municipia retained their own laws and customs; nor were they obliged to receive the Roman laws unless they chose it.
Footnote 259: Municipia were towns which had obtained the rights of Roman citizens.
Municipia were towns which had obtained the rights of Roman citizens.
Thus, on the one hand, the territories shared among the Roman citizens; on the other, the number of the municipia were considerably augmented.
Inhabitants of colonies and municipia belonging to the first families in their country, allied themselves with Catiline.
The former differed little from the municipia of the first degree, the others from the municipia of the second degree.
In the origin, the municipia were the allied towns preserving their autonomy, but engaging to render to Rome certain services (munus); whence the name of municipia.
The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "municipia" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word.