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The National Museum of Romanian History holds three flags from Assembly participants and the coat of arms of a fourth, which belonged to the Alba Iulia national guard. The first tricolor has dimensions of 235 × 100 centimeter, and each of its stripes ends on the fly in a corner with the tip turned outside. The wooden flagpole is painted black.
Flag of the Romanian Air Force: A light blue flag with coat of arms of Romanian Air Force in the centre with two stars in the left and in the right of coat of arms and surrounded by four air force elements Naval jack: A light blue flag with the national flag in the canton, a vertically set black-outlined anchor in the quarter ?—present ...
The Romanian Armed Forces have four ranks of general officer, in ascending order of rank: Brigadier General, Major General, Lieutenant General, General. In cases of exceptional military service, the President of Romania may award a general the rank of Mareșal, or Marshal of Romania, the highest military rank in the Romanian Armed Forces.
On Flag Day, public authorities and other state institutions are obliged by law to organize cultural/educational programs and events, with a patriotic or scientific character, devoted to Romanian history, as well as specific military ceremonies, organized within units of the Ministry of National Defense and the Ministry of the Internal Affairs.
The colors depend on the service branch (armă, literally "weapon") the bearer is a member of.They show on the shoulder slides which hold the rank insignia, on the band of combination caps, and on collar insignia.
The Steel Crown is kept in the National Museum of Romanian History: National personification: Romania [11] National motto "Nihil sine Deo" [12] (Latin, "Nothing without God") Used under the Hohenzollern-Sigmaringen dynasty "Toți în unu" [12] (Romanian, "All in one") Used during the second half of the reign of Alexandru Ioan Cuza "Dreptate ...
Some flags had a hole (a symbol of the revolution) and some changed to the later official blue-yellow-red format. During this period, Romania had no de jure national emblem. 10-lei coins issued in this period bore a composition showing a wreath of olive overlaid on the Romanian Flag where the coat of arms would be located on later coins.
(c) official symbols of the State, public authorities and organizations, such as armorial bearings, seals, flags, emblems, shields, badges and medals; (d) means of payment; (e) news and press information;