Taken from the coat of arms of Romania, The coat of arms was adopted by the Government of Romania and was in use until 1921 when, following the great Union of December 1, 1918, the new coat of arms of Greater Romania was devised, with the addition of the symbols instituted in 1872: the insignia of the House of Hohenzollern (a European royal house with origins in the early Middle Ages, which gave Romania four kings, the first of whom - Carol I, 1866-1914 - was the one that raised the country to the rank of a kingdom in 1881), the crown of Romania (made from the steel of a cannon captured at Pleven, during the 1877-1878 Independence War through which the country, by the valour of the Romanian soldiers, won its independence from the Ottoman Empire) and two face-to-face dolphins with their tails up, symbolising the Black Sea.
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Into the coat of arms of whole Romania, the arms of Banat are truncated, but the coat of arms of Banat by itself, isn't. Some variantes have two arches, some others three. See Dan Cernovodeanu's works in heraldly.
{{subst:Upload marker added by en.wp UW}} {{Information |Description = {{en|A golden lion holding a saber in attack possititon on a gold bridge , gules background}} |Source = http://www.romania.org/romania/coat-of-arms.html |Date = 1991 |Author = own |...