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As a result, the party proposes about half of the total number of bills although it has few curule seats.
A curule seat is a design of chair noted for its uses in Ancient Rome and Europe through to the 20th century.
In total, the party obtained 53 curule seats, becoming the 18th political force in the colombian politic spectrum.
Besides, the MIRA party obtained 35 councillors and 265 other curule seats.
The party also obtained 84 curule seats, included 10 councillor curule seats.
The MIRA party has the following members holding curule seats in Colombia:
In addition to this medieval iconography, however, King Charles's royal robes and lion headed curule seat have been borrowed from Roman sculpture.
As a result, the party got 4 curule seats in the Congress of Colombia and Carlos Alberto Baena was elected to be senator.
The 15th or early 16th-century curule seat that survives at York Minster, originally entirely covered with textiles, has rear members extended upwards to form a back, between which a rich textile was stretched.
With their Imperial Roman connotations, the backless curule seats found their way into furnishings for Napoleon, who moved some of the former royal pliants into his state bedchamber at Fontainebleau.
Examples of curule seats were redrawn from a 15th-century manuscript of the Roman de Renaude de Montauban and published in Henry Shaw's Specimens of Ancient Furniture (1836).
In the regional elections of October 2011, the MIRA party obtained the governorate of the Caquetá department, the mayorship of the El Paujil municipality, seven deputies, 47 councillors and over 300 other curule seats.
According to Livy the curule seat, like the Roman toga, originated in Etruria, and it has been used on surviving Etruscan monuments to identify magistrates, but much earlier stools supported on a cross-frame are known from the New Kingdom of Egypt.
The chair could be folded, and thus an easily transportable seat, originally for magisterial and promagisterial commanders in the field, developed a hieratic significance, expressed in fictive curule seats on funerary monuments, a symbol of power which was never entirely lost in post-Roman European tradition.
In the Roman Republic, and later the Empire, the curule seat (sella curulis, supposedly from currus, "chariot") was the chair upon which senior magistrates holding imperium were entitled to sit, including dictators, masters of the horse, consuls, praetors, censors, and the curule aediles.