This eventually led to 3 months of prison for him. After his was cut off his disabled pension, the colonel has actually refused to pay the taxes for the house. Other sources tell the story differently. Apparently, he continued to live somewhere in the basement of the house, in a small room connected to a bathroom. Radu’s disabled person pension from the First World War couldn’t cover the taxes. At that time, communists have confiscated the house, as Col. This house was kept in the family, as Jean left the building to his son, colonel Radu Miclescu, who lived in the house alongside his wife, Elsa Florescu up to 1948. The ceiling of the main area, the ballroom was decorated with beautiful paintings made by G. The house was bought by lawyer Jean Miclescu in 1904 and the construction was finalized. Construction started in the year 1900 but unfortunately, had to be interrupted, as the painter didn’t have enough money to continue. The plans for this building (located on Kisselef Boulevard) were executed by the architect Ion Mincu. The famous House Miclescu, also known as Giurgiuveanu family’s house from Felix and Otilia (a movie based on a novel written by George Calinescu in 1938, entitled Enigma Otiliei) is a neoromanian style jewel that once belonged to painter George Demetrescu Mirea.
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