United States United Kingdom China Singapore Canada Mali Brazil France Australia Germany Netherlands India Philippines Benin Russia Saudi Arabia Ireland South Africa Italy Belgium Nigeria United Arab Emirates Spain New Zealand Senegal Czech Republic Kenya Sweden Portugal Egypt Indonesia Japan Hong Kong Greece Mexico Norway Switzerland Malaysia Denmark Togo Poland Ghana Ukraine Burkina Faso Thailand Taiwan Romania Finland Pakistan Austria Tanzania Cote D'Ivoire Jordan Colombia Uganda Argentina Israel Morocco Chile South Korea Iraq Cameroon Hungary Bangladesh Bulgaria Kuwait Turkey Jamaica Libya Serbia Iran Niger Angola Peru Vietnam Slovenia Qatar Algeria Cambodia Lebanon Croatia Lithuania Tunisia Monaco Gambia Guinea Oman Sri Lanka Puerto Rico Venezuela Zambia Cyprus Trinidad and Tobago Bahrain Palestinian Territory Iceland Slovakia Syria Costa Rica Kazakhstan Albania Sierra Leone Georgia Malta Dominican Republic El Salvador Zimbabwe Yemen Azerbaijan Myanmar Ecuador Latvia Madagascar Mozambique Uruguay British Virgin Islands Ethiopia Democratic Republic of the Congo Liberia Bolivia Estonia Papua New Guinea Haiti Laos Jersey Reunion Moldova North Macedonia Malawi Botswana Luxembourg Mauritius Saint Lucia Bosnia and Herzegovina Namibia Burundi Nicaragua Belarus Rwanda Central African Republic Honduras Brunei Darussalam Panama Guatemala Mauritania Nepal Netherlands Antilles Maldives Seychelles Guyana Paraguay Mongolia Antigua and Barbuda Cabo Verde Barbados Northern Mariana Islands Sudan Gabon Suriname Republic of the Congo U.S. Virgin Islands Comoros Kyrgyzstan Bahamas Cayman Islands Isle of Man Grenada Kosovo Greenland Uzbekistan Eritrea Anguilla French Guiana Turkmenistan Martinique Montenegro Faroe Islands Guernsey Palau Dominica Saint Vincent and the Grenadines Romania Flag Meaning & Details 62 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