rdfs:comment
| - The Senate chamber was located in a wing of its own. The chamber was roughly rectangular, with a tiled, two-story-tall ceiling. At each corner were glass pillars, self-illuminating and open to the sky at the top. The Senate was arranged so that the Prime Minister (and Imperial governor, during the occupation) sat at the front of the room. On a lower level were a pair of tables for lower-ranking senators, and lower from those were a pair of tables for ministers and senior senators. In front of the senior tables was a space for speakers to address the Senate. Following the Battle of Bakura, the Senate moved to the Bakuran Senate Complex.
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abstract
| - The Senate chamber was located in a wing of its own. The chamber was roughly rectangular, with a tiled, two-story-tall ceiling. At each corner were glass pillars, self-illuminating and open to the sky at the top. The Senate was arranged so that the Prime Minister (and Imperial governor, during the occupation) sat at the front of the room. On a lower level were a pair of tables for lower-ranking senators, and lower from those were a pair of tables for ministers and senior senators. In front of the senior tables was a space for speakers to address the Senate. Following the Battle of Bakura, the Senate moved to the Bakuran Senate Complex. The Bakuran Senate Complex was a bunker-like complex in Salis D'aar, Bakura, that housed the Bakuran Senate after the Battle of Bakura to provide a safer location for the Senate than the Bakur Memorial Building. In case of emergencies, a number of the city's citizens would also be held inside the complex, which included heavy armor and weapons caches to provide for self-defense.
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