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Last modified: 2008-09-06 by alex danes
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Coat of arms adopted 24 September 1992.
The following is copied from the Romanian government's page about the Romanian coat of arms:
Romania's coat of arms has as a central element the golden eagle with cross. Traditionally, this eagle appears in the arms of the Arges county, the town of Pitesti and the town of Curtea de Arges. It stands for the "nest of the Basarabs," the nucleus around which Wallachia, was organised, the province that determined the historical fate of the whole Romania. The eagle, being the symbol of Latinity and a heraldic bird of the first order, symbolises courage, determination, the soaring toward great heights, power, grandeur. It is to be found also in Transylvania's coat of arms. The shield on which it is placed is azure, symbolising the sky. The eagle holds in its talons the insignia of sovereignty: a sceptre and a sabre, the latter reminding of Moldavia's ruler, Stephen the Great (1456-1504), also called "Christ's athlete" whereas the sceptre reminds of Michael the Brave (1593-1601), the first unifier of the Romanian Countries. On the bird's chest there is a quartered escutcheon with the symbols of the historical Romanian provinces (Wallachia, Moldavia, Transylvania, Banat and Crisana) as well as two dolphins reminding of the country's Black Sea Coast. In the first quarter there is again Wallachia's coat of arms on azure: an eagle or holding in its beak a golden Orthodox cross, accompanied by a golden sun on the right and a golden new moon on the left. In the second quarter there is Moldavia's traditional coat of arms, gules: an auroch head sable with a mullet of or between its horns, a cinquefoil rose on the dexter and a waning crescent on the sinister, both argent. The third quarter features the traditional coat of arms of Banat and Oltenia, gules: over waves, a golden bridge with two arched openings (symbolising Roman emperor Trajan's bridge over the Danube), wherefrom comes a golden lion holding a broadsword in its right forepaw. The fourth quarter shows the coat of arms of Transylvania with Maramures and Crisana: a shield parted by a narrow fesse, gules; in the chief, on azure, there is an eagle sable with golden beak coming out of the fesse, accompanied by a golden sun on the dexter and a crescent argent on the sinister; on the base, on or, there are seven crenellated towers, placed four and three. Also represented are the lands adjacent to the Black Sea, on azure: two dolphins affronts, head down.
Željko Heimer, 3 February 1997
Both
Album des Pavillons (2000) and the
illustration above have the sword and the sceptre shown argent (white, that
is, of course).
Flaggenbuch (1939) shows a
similar coat of arms used before WWII where the two elements are shown
differently coloured. The sword is (light) blue with a golden handle and the
sceptre is all golden (with a fleur-de-lys top, intentionally changed since
then, I presume). So, I wonder, do we actually have the correct colours for
the two items?
Željko Heimer, 22 December 2002
Note: For antiquarians and biologists! The term "aurochs" (pl. aurochsen) is used here to denote the extinct wild ox,
Bos primigenius. Some references use "aurochs" to denote a different species,
the European bison (Bison bonasus), which, although endangered, is not yet
extinct; these authors use "urus" for B. primigenius (e.g., Webster's, 1913
edition). This usage is incorrect and should be discouraged. "Aurochs" and "urus"
shold be used for B. primigenius, and "wisent" for the European bison.
Alex Neumann, 18 March 2006
From 1866/67 until 1948 the civil ensign of Romania was the simple
tricolour, without any emblem. Around 1900 three districts (Braila, Galati and
Giurgiu) flown civil ensigns with their respective coat of arms on the yellow
field; I don't know until which date this use survived. The flag with the
State coat of arms on the yellow stripe was, from 1867 until 1947 the naval
ensign. Until 1881 it was also used as princely standard and from 1881 to
c.1900 as royal standard. In c.1900 the first royal standard of peculiar
design was adopted, to be changed in 1922. In between 1867-1947 the coat of
arms of Romania changed many times, so did the naval ensign. Most of the
changes were concerning minor details, but at least four different versions of
it are relevant (1867-1872, 1872-1897, 1897-1922, 1922-1947).
Mario Fabretto, 15 April 1997
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