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Alexandru Marghiloman House

- Bulevardul General Gheorghe Magheru 12 -
The one-story building, which was constructed somewhere at the end of the 19th and the beginning of the 20th century, was built according to the project of the Romanian architect . It was built for the Romanian conservative statesman, Alexandru Marghiloman, who was born on July 4, 1854, in , in a rural bourgeois family. His father, , was a large landlord from Wallachia, and his mother, Irina Izvoranu, was part of a wealthy family from Oltenia. Alexandru Marghiloman attended the Saint Sava College in Bucharest, and then he enrolled in the Faculty of Law and the High School of Political Sciences in . After graduation, in 1879 he became a prosecutor and then a judge at the Ilfov Court. In 1881, he resigned to become a lawyer, and three years later, he was appointed state attorney. On November 6, 1884, he was elected deputy in the First Buzău College. In 1890, Alexandru Marghiloman got married to , the granddaughter of ruler and the sister of Prince . Alexandru and Elisa got divorced in 1906, and in 1907 Elisa remarried to .
Alexandru Marghiloman
As a conservative and Germanophile around the , Alexandru Marghiloman accepted to become prime minister at a very difficult time, in the spring of 1918, when, abandoned by the main ally in the area, Russia became following the revolution, Romania had to accept an unfavorable peace with the Central Powers. After negotiating the peace , Marghiloman sent Romanian troops to to stabilize the former tsarist governorate that had then become the Moldavian Democratic Republic. After this Council voted for the Union of Bessarabia with Romania, Marghiloman received the act of union and acted for its recognition. Alexandru Marghiloman died on May 10, 1925, in Buzău, at the age of 70. After his death, the building, which was a car showroom for some time, was sold and not soon after that, in 1929 the building was demolished. The building was demolished together with some surrounding buildings to make way for the construction of the ARO complex, which was fully completed in 1935.
Alexandru Marghiloman signing the Treaty of Bucharest on 7 May 1918
The roof of the building, which was built in the styles of Neo-Renaissance and Neo-Baroque, featured many and . Several decorative vases could be seen at the same height, as well as a swan neck that contained a . The pediment was supported by four within their midst an oval window. Underneath the , which ran around the entire building, you could alternately see cartouches, , and corbels. The was flanked by two , which feature several that contained . The same counted for the balustrades that secured the roof terrace placed on top of another sunroom.
The building in 1913