Spanish Parliament
ThePalacio de las Cortes is the meeting grounds forSpain'sCongress of Deputies and one of theMadrid landmarks inMario is Missing! that is attacked when the city is invaded byKoopa Troopas. In-game, the building is consistently called theSpanish Parliament, despite that not being the name of the building and not all of theCortes Generales convening there. The Koopa Troopas steal theLion's Tail from one of the lion statues at the front of the palace, leading to the entire building shutting down.Luigi eventually returns the Lion's Tail to the Palacio's information booth once he takes it back.
Questions[edit]
Luigi must prove that the tail is genuine by answering the questions below, the palace reopens.
- The brass used to make the lion was once:
- a key to the Parliament building
- a cage for the King of Beasts
- a Morrocan cannon
- When was the Cortes built?
- 1776
- 1943
- 1843
- 1978
- Spain adopted its constitution in:
- 1776
- 1943
- 1843
- 1978
Pamphlet information[edit]
Spain adopted its democratic constitution in 1978. This was two years after the death of General Franco, who had run the country for decades as a stuffy tyrant. Since then, Spain has been a democratic monarchy with the king as leader, although others have a say in the government. The Parliament, or governing body, meets in the Palacio de las Cortes. Two bronze lions guard the building. The bronze for the King of Beasts was melted down from a captured Moroccan cannon.
Media[edit]
File infoMedia:Palacio de las Cortes MIMDX.ogv 0:07 |
Names in other languages[edit]
Language | Name | Meaning | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
German | der spanische Parlament[1] | the Spanish Parliament |
References[edit]
- ^Mario wir vermisst.Software Toolworks (German). Retrieved September 24, 2024.