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  1. 1812. The Count Mercy House ( Romanian: Casa Contelui de Mercy) is a historical monument [1] in Timișoara, Romania. Also known as Mercy Palace, it was the residence of Florimond de Mercy d'Argenteau, former governor of Banat. Over time, the building was also the residence of the Roman Catholic bishop and a prison, and nowadays it houses ...

  2. Castelul Contelui Mercy.jpg 3,872 × 2,592; 2.98 MB. Claude Florimond de Mercy.jpg 660 × 810; 135 KB. Claudius Florimund Mercy bust2.jpg 512 × 384; 44 KB. Grafmercy.jpg 267 × 400; 19 KB. Mercy Generalfeldmarschall.jpg 533 × 652; 145 KB. Temesi bánság és környéke az 1716-1717 Claude Florimond de Mercy térképe.jpg 2,048 × 1,736; 5.55 ...

  3. El Conde Claude Florimund de Mercy (1666 - 29 de junio de 1734) fue un mariscal de campo imperial, nacido en Longwy en Lorena, ahora en Francia . Mercy entró en el ejército austriaco como voluntario en 1682. Ganó su comisión en la gran batalla de Viena al año siguiente; y durante siete años de campaña en Hungría alcanzó el rango de ...

  4. Count Claudius Florimund de Mercy (1666 – 29 June 1734) was an Imperial field marshal, born at Longwy in Lorraine, now in France. Mercy entered the Austrian army as a volunteer in 1682. He won his commission at the great Battle of Vienna in the following year; and during seven years of campaigning in Hungary rose to the rank of Rittmeister. A wound sustained at this time permanently injured ...

  5. Mercy was killed on 29 June 1734 at the Battle of Parma while personally leading his troops. He left no children, and his name passed to Count Argenteau, from whom came the family of Mercy-Argenteau. He was the foster father of Florimund Count de Mercy d'Argenteau. On 3 August 2009, a bust of the count was unveiled in Central Park, Timișoara.

  6. 16 de abr. de 2024 · Florimund Mercy, Count d’Argenteau (born April 20, 1727, Liège, Austrian Netherlands—died Aug. 25, 1794, London) was an Austrian diplomat who, at the outset of the French Revolution, attempted to maintain the Austro-French alliance and to save the life of the Austrian-born French queen Marie-Antoinette. Entering the diplomatic service in ...

  7. Mercy was killed on 29 June 1734 at the Battle of Parma while personally leading his troops. He left no children, and his name passed to Count Argenteau, from whom came the family of Mercy-Argenteau. He was the foster father of Florimund Count de Mercy d'Argenteau. On 3 August 2009, a bust of the count was unveiled in Central Park, Timișoara.