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According to a well-known historical source, the princely flag of Stephen the Great worn during a ceremony in 1485 was described as the "great flag of red silk, beautifully reproducing in gold the coat of arms of the Land of Moldavia" ("Banderium quoque magnum sericeum coloris rubri, in quo arma Terrae Moldaviae pulchre auro depicta erant").
The reverse is mirrored. The flag ratio is 1:2. Until further provisions, the State Flag of Moldova is used as the national flag and ensign as well; that is, civil, state and war flag and ensign. [1] [2] The blue-yellow-red tricolour of Moldova is based on the flag of Romania, reflecting the two countries' national and cultural affinity. On ...
Symbol National flag: The State Flag of the Republic of Moldova (Romanian: Drapelul de Stat al Republicii Moldova) is a rectangular cloth, equally vertically tripartite, starting from the flag pole in blue, yellow and red, similar to the flag of Romania. The difference is the State Emblem of the Republic of Moldova disposed in the midst of the ...
Flag Date Use Description April 27, 1990 – August 27, 1991: State flag of the Moldavian SSR, later known as SSR Moldova and Republic of Moldova. Ratio: 1:2. 1952 – April 27, 1990: State flag of the Moldavian SSR: Ratio: 1:2. Reverse flag: All flags of the constituent republics of the Soviet Union did not bear the hammer and sickle on their ...
Coat of arms of Moldova; Armiger: Republic of Moldova: Adopted: 13 July 1990: Shield: Per fess gules and azure, an aurochs head cabossed overall, accompanied by two lozenges to its sides, a mullet of eight points between the horns, a heraldic rose to dexter and a crescent decrescent to sinister, all or.
Anarâškielâ; العربية; Azərbaycanca; Башҡортса; Беларуская; Беларуская (тарашкевіца) Български
Other theories is that it is derived from old German Molde, meaning "open-pit mine", [citation needed] or the Gothic Mulda meaning "dust", "dirt" (cognate with the English mould), referring to the river. [citation needed] The short-lived capital of Moldova, Baia in the Suceava County, was called Stadt Molde in a 1421 German document.
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