The Church of the Holy Princes and Annunciation dating to 1787 and having LMI code: IS-II-m-B-04199.01
The Sturdza Palace, dating to the 17th century, with LMI code: IS-II-M-B-04199.02
The Miclăușeni Monastery Park, dating to the 18th century and having listed as LMI: IS-II-M-B-04199.03
History
Original Manor
In 1410, VoivodeAlexander the Good' granted a fief to boyar and member of Sfatul Domnesc', Miclăuş, an estate located near the Siret River plains. After the death of the noble, the estate became known by his namesake, Miclăuşeni. On April 25, 1591, the nobleman's descendants sold the estate to treasurer Simon Stroici, who built a mansion on the property and fortified the village of Miclăuşeni in 1598. The ruins of the first mansion could still be seen as late as the beginning of the twentieth century. In his last will and testament dated June 5, 1622, Simon Stroici bequeathed the estate and village of Miclauseni to Lupu Prăjăscu, stating:
Lupului Prăjăscului şi nepoatei mele Saftei, şi fiului meu, la Gligorie, cu heleştee şi cu prisăci şi cu tot venitul, pentru că i-am luat spre dânşii ca să-mi fie ei ficiori de suflet.
In 1697, the descendants of Lupu Prăjăscu, whom had no survivors, gave the estate to distant relatives, brothers Ion and Sandu Sturdza. April 19, 1699, the Sturdza brothers divided the estate with Miclăuşeni being awarded to Ion Sturdza. Feudal peasants and gypsies worked the land, whose descendants to this day have surnames describing their feudal professions; Bucătaru, Muraru, Pitaru, Curelaru, Mindirigiu, Bivolaru, Surugiu, as described by Romanian Historian in his book "Castelul Miclăușeni în cultura română". In 1752, Lord Ioan Sturdza rebuilt the boyar mansion, building it with a semi-basement and cross-shaped ground level. The mansion had 20 rooms, ten of them on each floor. Race horses were housed in the Manor's stable. The floor and ceilings were made of wood beam and wood planks. It is said that the housekeepers had their work cut out for them dealing with the mice and bugs that roamed the residence, with the Master of the Manor giving the following orders:
să se puie în var vreo doftorie de ploşniţă şi să speli cu aceea şi podelele pe sus cu badanaua“, în timp ce „bortele de şoareci să se astupe toate cu cărbuni pisaţi cu steclă
Concerned with the expansion of the estate, the son of Ion Strudza, Dimitrie, built a church in the vicinity of the palace in 1821-1823. He adorned the church with baroque-style icons and numerous valuable objects. The son of Dimitrie, Alecu Sturdza Miclăuşanu, built a park of 42-hectares all stylized as an English Garden with ornamental tree species and numerous flower beds. Alecu, as a hobby, dealt in the collection and preservation of rare books and manuscripts, which further added to the richness of the Palace. Even future Prime Minister Mihail Kogălniceanu spoke of the rare books and manuscripts collected by the estate. Although cousin to Prince Mihail Strudza, Alecu Strudza embraced the ideas of the Revolutionaries of 1848. He died in 1848 of cholera, under suspicion that he was poisoned by the Prince. His mark upon the estate was a high-degree of maintenance and precision on the English Gardens and Park on the estate grounds. He was buried in the manor's church, leaving the estate to the widow Catina. She passed the estate to her son, George A. Strudza in 1863, whom built the Sturdza Palace as seen today
Construction of the Palace
In 1869, George Sturdza married Maria, the daughter of writer Ion Ghica, moving the family into the Manor. Maria, 11 years younger than George, was unsettled in her new environment and in the Manor. Eager to remake the Manor building, George Sturdza sold off several forests from the Estate and took out a loan of 100,000 Lei from the Romanian Land Credit Society . He placed the Miclăuşeni Estate as collateral, agreeing to pay back the debts in gold coins. Between 1880 and 1904, George Sturdza built on the site of the old Manor the late Gothic architectural palace that exists today. He wanted the Palace complex to mimic the feudal castles of the West, also be reminiscent of the Palace of Culture in Iasi, and lastly also of the in Ruginoasa. The Palace was used as a home for orphans with disabilities under Communist rule, counter to the wishes of daughter Catherine Sturdza who became a nun and donated the property to become a nunnery, which it finally became in 1990.