The Franciscan Church is a place of worship in Cluj-Napoca, Romania. It was built between 1260 and 1290, on the site of an older Catholic church destroyed during the Tatar invasions in 1241.
In 1390, the Benedictine monks received the church. They extended it and built a small Gothic cloister near the church, with the help of John Hunyadi.
In 1556, the Queen of Hungary, Isabella Jagieà Âà Âo moved to the cloister and lived there with her son John II Sigismund Zápolya until 1557.
The church is located on Museum Square (PiaÃÂa Muzeului), previously known as the Little Square (PiaÃÂa MicÃÂ) to distinguish it from the Large Square surrounding St. Michael's Church; Caroline Square (PiaÃÂa Carolina or Karolina ter), after the nearby Caroline Obelisk built in honor of the 1817 visit of Caroline Augusta of Bavaria and her husband Francis II; and Dimitrov Square (PiaÃÂa Dimitrov), so named in the early communist period for Georgi Dimitrov.