
Last modified: 2018-03-24 by rob raeside
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These are flags of government ministers from the Kingdom of Romania
(1921-1947) unless otherwise noted.
War minister:
![[War minister]](../images/r/ro~mw39.gif) image
by Željko Heimer, based on
    Flaggenbuch (1939)
image
by Željko Heimer, based on
    Flaggenbuch (1939)
The national tricolour in a square format with a white letter M in the middle 
of the blue stripe. 
As explained previously, there are some minor differences between 
this flag and the one used today, but they may be only due to
different representations.
There is no indication when this flag was adopted. According to FOTW 
the flag was used up to 1952 when a new flag was adopted for the
function. However, do we have any confirmation that it was actually
used after WWII at all? I presume that it might have been technically
abolished only in 1948, but it might have been in disuse even longer.
Željko Heimer, 25 December 2002
The national tricolour in the square form. The flag was apparently abandoned 
after WWII, and was not readopted in the end of 20th century.
Željko Heimer, 25 December 2002
![[Navy Jack, 1921]](../images/r/ro-21jak.gif) 1:1, image
by Calvin Paige Herring
 
1:1, image
by Calvin Paige Herring
A yellow square flag with a red border and the coat of arms in the middle. 
According to the explanation for the war ensign, below, the maximum usage period 
might have been 1921-1948. We need more data to see what was used earlier, if 
anything.
Željko Heimer, 25 December 2002
The national tricolour with the crown in the middle stripe. This flag is, I 
presume, equivalent to what we would call a reserve officer's ensign, though 
from the caption in
    Flaggenbuch (1939) it is not clear if the 
flag was indeed used by an officer not on duty. One should note that the crown 
used was not the national crown used to 
crown the shield of the arms (usually called, I think, the Iron Crown of 
Romania), but the conventional heraldic royal crown. (But then, neither the 
crowns with which are crowned heraldic beasts in the coat of arms are Iron 
Crowns.)
Željko Heimer, 25 December 2002
Romanian sources do not have information about Reserve Naval Officers working 
as Captains/Master Mariners on S.M.R. vessels having the right to hoist such a 
flag on board when they were on duty! Besides the Captains (Naval Reserve) the 
S.M.R vessels were
captained by civil Captains so I doubt very much that 
S.M.R. (a government company) would had made such a discrimination between
Captains!
Marinel Chiriac, 2 May 2015
A blue square flag with a white letter P in the middle. As with most other 
flags shown in
    Flaggenbuch (1939) for Romania this was 
probably abandoned after WWII, and was not readopted in the 1990's. However, I 
would suspect that Romania uses since second half of the 20th century a white 
triangular pennant with a voided blue lozenge as a signal indicating river 
police on Danube as do other Danubian countries. I don't remember reading 
reports about it from Romania (nor Bulgaria) so confirmation should be 
interesting.
Željko Heimer, 25 December 2002
Postal Flag of the “Serviciul Maritim Român” (S.M.R.) (Romanian Maritime 
Service). A white swallow-tailed flag with the national flag in a square canton
defaced overall with the royal crown and hanging from the canton on
blue strings a golden postal horn. This image was made using the crown from Calvin Paige 
Herring's flag of a Naval Officer as Captain of Merchant Ship.
Source: the German Flaggenbuch, redrawn following the depiction of the flag in 
the source.
Željko Heimer, 25 December 2002
S.M.R. paramount document, "Instructiuni asupra serviciului interior la 
bordul bastimentelor, Bucuresti, 1897 (free translation: Instructions with 
regard to the job fulfilling on board the ships Bucharest, 1897") describes the 
SMR postal flag as follows: "A white swallow-tailed flag with the national flag 
in a canton and a postal horn and a crown on white background."
Marinel 
Chiriac, 2 May 2015
National flag with white border.
    Flaggenbuch (1939) gives dimensions: height 
of the tricolour 6, width of each stripe 3, width of border 2. Of course, this 
yields an overall ratio of 10:13. I suspect that these dimensions, which are 
certainly the most straight forward have not changed since and that if later 
images (like the one in
    Album des Pavillons (1995) do not entirely 
match it they are only imprecise.
Željko Heimer, 25 December 2002