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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.
Army flag of the Kingdom of Romania Blue-yellow-red vertical tricolor with the country's coat of arms in the middle, surrounded by a laurel wreath. In corners, the monogram of king Carol II of Romania , crowned and surrounded by a laurel wreath.
The flag of the island of Psara, adopted in 1821 during the Greek Revolution, is almost identical in style and design to the flags of Hydra, Spetses and other islands (see above) with some differences. The field is white and the surrounding border is red while all the symbols it is defaced with are all red.
List of Romanian flags; G. Flag of Galicia and Lodomeria; H. History of the flags of Romania; S. Flag of the Székelys; T. Flag of Timișoara; Flag and coat of arms ...
The national flag of Romania (drapelul național al României) is a tricolour featuring three equal vertical bands colored blue (at the flagpole), yellow and red, with a width to length ratio of 2:3.
Bulgarian islands are parts of Eastern Mediterranean. St. Anastasia Island; St. Cyricus Island; St. Ivan Island; St. Thomas Island; Romanian islands Sacalinu Mare Island; Sacalinu Mic Island; Turkish islands, between Europe And Asia Amasra Tavşan Adası; Büyükada (Amasra) Giresun Island; Hoynat Islet; Kefken Island; Öreke Ukrainian islands ...
Flag of the Canary Islands: The flag of the Autonomous Community of the Canary Islands is a vertical tricolour of three equal bands of white, blue, and yellow. The state flag includes the Coat of arms of the Canary Islands in the central band; the civil flag omits this. The designs were made official by the Statute of Autonomy of the Canarian ...
Snake Island: an island located in the Black Sea, that was part of Romania between 1878 and 1948. Principality of Moldavia during the reign of Stephen the Great. Others: Transnistria: controlled by Romania from 1941 to 1944 as the Transnistria Governorate (Romania did not formally incorporate Transnistria into its administrative framework). [11]