bg Targu Mures

Kendeffy Palace

- Strada Farkas Bolyai 30 -
The two-story building was built in 1789 by Krisztina Bethlen, the widow of Count Elek Kendeffy, as a winter residence. Through the contract signed on June 1, 1826, the son of the countess, Ádám Kendeffy, surrendered the palace to the Royal Table, that's, the supreme court of the province, receiving in exchange for two houses in the city center. The building along with the outbuildings were redeveloped to suit this new function. The works were executed according to the projects drawn up by topographical engineer József Sófalvi and with the contribution of craftsmen such as master mason Ignác Schaffner and master carpenter Thomas Rupert. Before the , the Romanian revolutionaries and in Marosvásáhely stayed in this building. The palace remained the seat of the Royal Board until the end of the existence of the Grand Principality of Transylvania as an autonomous Habsburg province in 1849, but even after this date, the building continued to house judicial institutions.
The building shown in an etch created by János Greguss in the 1860s
The two on the eastern side of the building, which is built in the styles of Baroque and Neo-Classical, are both embellished with . The that are located on this same side, are all crowned with an Ionic . A is placed on top of both the oval-shaped windows, as well as some of the other second floor windows. Either a pointed or a straight is placed above the windows on the second floor. Some of the and some fragments above the first floor windows are adorned with .
An old postcard from 1905 that shows the building