Taiwan United States Hong Kong Singapore Japan Malaysia Australia United Kingdom Germany Canada Ireland Russia France Macao China South Korea Brazil Indonesia India Thailand Italy Spain Sweden Netherlands Vietnam Turkey Poland Czech Republic New Zealand Belgium Philippines Mexico Switzerland Saudi Arabia Portugal Argentina Austria Ukraine Finland Denmark Pakistan Norway Cambodia United Arab Emirates South Africa Greece Peru Romania Algeria Chile Egypt Colombia Morocco Hungary Bulgaria Myanmar Iraq Bangladesh Oman Venezuela Israel Qatar Slovakia Kazakhstan Serbia Kyrgyzstan Laos Nigeria Sri Lanka Croatia Azerbaijan Costa Rica Ecuador Georgia Panama Cameroon Lithuania Latvia Tunisia Ghana Belarus Libya Kuwait Bolivia Dominican Republic Slovenia Democratic Republic of the Congo Jordan Uzbekistan Mongolia Estonia Angola Brunei Darussalam Botswana Kenya Tanzania Syria Puerto Rico French Polynesia Honduras Guatemala Armenia Lebanon Paraguay Cyprus Iran Nepal Bahrain Gabon Montenegro Palestinian Territory Cuba Bosnia and Herzegovina El Salvador North Macedonia Cote D'Ivoire Iceland Senegal Luxembourg Niger Yemen Nicaragua Zimbabwe Malta Guam Albania Moldova Mali Sudan Uruguay Maldives Belize Eswatini Lesotho Ethiopia Fiji Afghanistan Martinique Reunion Cabo Verde Barbados Somalia Isle of Man Malawi Jamaica Trinidad and Tobago Uganda Papua New Guinea Togo Mauritania Palau Suriname Djibouti Madagascar Benin Saint Lucia Guadeloupe New Caledonia Zambia Aruba Guinea Liberia Turkmenistan French Guiana Tajikistan Republic of the Congo Mauritius British Virgin Islands Seychelles Marshall Islands Equatorial Guinea South Sudan Saint Vincent and the Grenadines Curacao Namibia Liechtenstein Burkina Faso Mayotte Haiti Burundi Bhutan Mozambique Kiribati Gibraltar Northern Mariana Islands Andorra Romania Flag Meaning & Details 72 VISITORS FROM HERE! Romania Flag Flag Information three equal vertical bands of cobalt blue (hoist side), chrome yellow, and vermilion red modeled after the flag of France, the colors are those of the principalities of Walachia (red and yellow) and Moldavia (red and blue), which united in 1862 to form Romania the national coat of arms that used to be centered in the yellow band has been removed note: now similar to the flag of Chad, whose blue band is darker also resembles the flags of Andorra and Moldova
Learn more about Romania »
Source: CIA - The World Factbook