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National symbols of Romania

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There are a number of national symbols of Romania, representing Romania or its people in either official or unofficial capacities.

List of national symbols

Official symbols in Romania

Type Image Symbol
National flag The Flag of Romania
(Romanian: Drapelul României) is a tricolour with vertical stripes: beginning from the flagpole, blue, yellow and red, these colors found on late 16th century royal grants of Michael the Brave, as well as shields and banners representing Romanians everywhere. During the Wallachian uprising of 1821 these colors composed the revolutionaries’ flag and for the first time a recorded meaning was attributed to them: “Liberty (sky-blue), Justice (field yellow), Fraternity (blood red)”. The colors also symbolise the Principalities that formed Romania: Vallachia - yellow (having a yellow and blue flag prior to the 1859 Union), Moldavia - red (having a red and yellow flag prior to the 1859 Union) and Transylvania -blue (having a blue-red-yellow flag prior to the 1918 Union)
National anthem
Awaken thee, Romanian!

Deșteaptă-te, române!
It was written and published during the 1848 revolution and was first sung in late June in the same year in the city of Brașov, being immediately accepted as the revolutionary anthem. Since then, this song, which contains a message of liberty and patriotism, has been sung during all major Romanian conflicts, including during the 1989 anti-Ceauşist revolution. In 1990 it became the national anthem, replacing the communist-era national anthem "Trei culori" ("Three colors"). The Moldavian Democratic Republic, during its brief existence, between 1917 and 1918 as well as the Republic of Moldova between 1991 and 1994 had the same anthem. July 29 is the "National Anthem Day" (Ziua Imnului național), an annual observance in Romania.
National coat of arms The Coat of arms of Romania
The golden aquila holding an Orthodox cross is the symbol of Latinity and a heraldic bird of the first order symboling courage. The shield on which it is placed is azure, symbolising the sky. The eagle holds in its talons the insignia of sovereignty: a mace and a sword, the latter reminding of Moldavia’s ruler, Stephen the Great whereas the mace reminds of Michael the Brave, the first unifier of the Romanian Principalities. On the bird’s chest there is a quartered escutcheon with the symbols of the historical Romanian provinces (Wallachia, Moldavia, Transylvania, Banat and Oltenia but also Dobruja).
Military Flag The Battle Colors of Romania
The military colors are the symbol of military honor, bravery and glory. They evoke the past struggle of the Romanian people for national liberty and the traditions of unity, reminding each soldier of his sacred duty to serve the Fatherland with trust, and to defend at all costs the unity, sovereignty and independence of Romania
National holiday Great Union Day
It commemorates the assembly of the delegates of the people of Transilvania held in Alba Iulia, which declared the Union of Transylvania with Romania. This holiday was set after the 1989 Romanian Revolution and it marks the unification of Transylvania, but also of the provinces of Bessarabia and Bukovina with the Romanian Kingdom, in 1918. Prior to 1918, the national holiday of Romania was set to be on May 10, which had a double meaning: it was the day on which Carol I of Romania set foot on the Romanian soil (in 1866), and it was the day on which the prince ratified the Declaration of Independence from the Ottoman Empire in 1877. In Communist Romania, the date of the national holiday was set to August 23 to mark the 1944 overthrow of the pro-fascist government of Marshal Ion Antonescu.
Official language Romanian
The main Eastern Romance language, spoken by around 24 to 28 million people

Unofficial symbols

Type Image Symbol
National Crown The Steel Crown of Romania
The crown was forged from the steel of a gun captured by the Romanian Army from the Ottomans during the War of Independence (1877–1878). King Carol I of Romania chose steel, and not gold, to symbolize the bravery of the Romanian soldiers and was crowned with it during the ceremonies of the proclamation of Romania as a kingdom in 1881 in Bucharest.The Crown was again used in 1922 at the coronation of King Ferdinand I of Romania and Queen Maria of Romania as sovereigns at Alba-Iulia. The third time the Crown was used during the coronation and anointment of King Michael I of Romania by the Orthodox Patriarch of Romania, Nicodim Munteanu, in the Patriarchal Cathedral of Bucharest, on the very day of his second accession, September 6, 1940. The Steel Crown is kept in the National Museum of Romanian History
National patron saint Saint Andrew
According to the Romanian Orthodox Church, Andrew preached the Gospel to the Daco-Romans in the province of Dobruja (Scythia Minor), whom he converted to Christianity. There are some archaeological evidences for this tradition found in a cave called Basarabi, near Constanţa harbour, containing carved symbols of ancient Christianity. The Romanians have never been recordedly converted to Christianity as the neighboring nations, instead adopting the Orthodox Faith by themselves during the ethnogenesis process in an unorganized fashion. Having Apostle Andrew as a patron saint marks a special connection with the Ecumenical Patriarchate of Constantinopole and the political and religious heritage of Byzantium in the Romanian Principalities, metaphorically called Byzantium after Byzantium
National personification Dracula or Vlad the Impaler
Revolutionary Romania
National Motto "Nihil Sine Deo"
(Latin, "Nothing without God")
used under the Hohenzollern-Sigmaringen dynasty
"Toți în unu"
(Romanian, "All in one")
used during the reign of Alexandru Ioan Cuza
"Dreptate, Frăție"
(Romanian, "Justice, Brotherhood")
used during the 1848 revolution
"In Fide Salus"
(Latin, "In Faith is the Salvation")
used as the motto of the Order of the Star of Romania since 10 May 1887
National Founders Decebal
His name meaning "The Brave", Decebal was the last king of Dacia between 87–106 AD and is famous for fighting three wars and negotiating two periods of peace against the Roman Empire under two emperors, during which he continued to act as an independent king, rather than a conquered client and repeatedly annoyed or infuriated the Romans. Consequently, the Legions under Trajan's orders went on the offensive again in 105 AD, taking the Dacian capital city of Sarmizegetusa in 106, leading Decebal to commit suicide. Decebal is considered a national hero in Romania, a symbol of the Dacian origins of the Romanian people.
Trajan
The Roman Emperor who conquered Dacia and brought the Latin element that together with the Dacian autochthons created the Romanian people
Mihai Viteazul
During his reign, the principalities of Wallachia (1593–1601), Transylvania (1599–1600), and Moldavia (1600) forming the territory of present-day Romania and Republic of Moldova were ruled for the first time by a single Romanian leader. He is regarded as one of Romania's greatest national heroes.
Alexandru Ioan Cuza
Ferdinand of Romania
Floral emblem Edelweiss
Romanian Peony
Dog rose
National animal Lynx
Dacian Draco
Aurochs (especially in Moldavia)
National bird Great white pelican
Golden eagle (the mountain aquila)
National tree Oak
National Poet Mihai Eminescu
National Epic Miorița
National Hat Clop
Cușmă
National Motif File:RO GJ Tg Jiu Endless Column park.jpg The Endless Column depicting an important motif in the traditional art. The pattern stands for infinity and persistence.
National Art Car cu Boi (by Nicolae Grigorescu)
National Guard Brigade Brigada 30 Gardă "Mihai Viteazul"
National Building Palace of the Parliament
National mountain Bucegi, believed to be the Dacian holy mountain Kogainon, on which the mythical figure Zalmoxis resided in a cave, and also the location of the enigmatic natural formations called The Great Sphinx and Babele
National Sport Oină
National Dance Căluș
National instrument Pan flute
Tulnic
National Liquor Pălincă
Țuică
National Dish Bulz
Mititei
Borș, a sour soup made from fermented wheat bran especially popular in Moldavia
Fasole cu ciolan, a dish of beans and smoked meat.
National Sweet Cozonac