List of diplomatic missions of Romania
This is a list of diplomatic missions of Romania, excluding honorary consulates.[1] Romania has an extensive and a large diplomatic network. The date diplomatic relations were established is given after the country name.
Africa
Algeria - Algiers (Embassy)
Angola - Luanda (Embassy)
Egypt (1906) - Cairo (Embassy)
Ethiopia - Addis Ababa (Embassy)
Kenya - Nairobi (Embassy)
Libya - Tripoli (Embassy)
Morocco (February 20, 1962) - Rabat (Embassy)
Nigeria - Abuja (Embassy)
Senegal - Dakar (Embassy)
South Africa (November 16, 1990) Sudan - Khartoum (Embassy)
Tunisia (1963) - Tunis (Embassy)
Uganda Zimbabwe - Harare (Embassy)
Americas
Argentina - Buenos Aires (Embassy)
Brazil - Brasília (Embassy)
- Rio de Janeiro (Consulate-General)
Canada (August 16, 1919) Chile (February 5, 1925 – 1943 - legation; 1965-, embassy) - Santiago (Embassy)
Colombia - Bogotá (Embassy)
Cuba - Havana (Embassy)
Mexico (July 20, 1935 - legation; interrupted December 1941; re-established March 20, 1973 - embassy) - Mexico City (Embassy)
Peru - Lima (Embassy)
United States (1880–1941; 1946-) - Washington, D.C. (Embassy)
- Chicago (Consulate-General)
- Los Angeles (Consulate-General)
- New York (Consulate-General)
Uruguay (July 24, 1935) - Montevideo (Embassy)
Venezuela - Caracas (Embassy)
Asia
Afghanistan - Kabul (embassy)
Armenia (1992) - Yerevan (Embassy)
Azerbaijan (June 21, 1992) - Baku (Embassy)
China (October 5, 1949) Georgia (June 25, 1992) - Tbilisi (Embassy)
India Indonesia - Jakarta (Embassy)
Iran - Tehran (Embassy)
Iraq - Baghdad (Embassy)
Israel (June 11, 1948) - Tel Aviv (Embassy)
Japan (August 1917 - legation; suspended October 31, 1944; re-established September 1, 1959; June 1, 1964 - embassy) - Tokyo (Embassy)
Jordan - Amman (Embassy)
Kazakhstan (July 15, 1992) - Astana (Embassy)
North Korea - Pyongyang (Embassy)
South Korea (March 30, 1990) - Seoul (Embassy)
Kuwait - Kuwait City (Embassy)
Lebanon - Beirut (Embassy)
Malaysia - Kuala Lumpur (Embassy)
Pakistan - Islamabad (Embassy)
Palestinian Authority (November 16, 1988) - Ramallah (Representative Office)
Philippines - Manila (Embassy)
Qatar - Doha (Embassy)
Saudi Arabia - Riyadh (Embassy)
Singapore (1992) - Singapore (Embassy)
Sri Lanka - Colombo (Embassy)
Syria - Damascus (Embassy)
Thailand - Bangkok (Embassy)
Turkey Turkmenistan - Ashgabat (Embassy)
United Arab Emirates Uzbekistan (October 6, 1995) - Tashkent (Embassy)
Vietnam (February 3, 1950) - Hanoi (Embassy)
Europe
Albania - Tirana (Embassy)
Austria (September 1879) - Vienna (Embassy)
Belarus - Minsk (Embassy)
Belgium (1880) - Brussels (Embassy)
Bosnia and Herzegovina - Sarajevo (Embassy)
Bulgaria - Sofia (Embassy)
Croatia (August 29, 1992) - Zagreb (Embassy)
Cyprus (August 16, 1960) - Nicosia (Embassy)
Czech Republic (December 18, 1992) - Prague (Embassy)
Denmark (April 13, 1917) - Copenhagen (Embassy)
Estonia - Tallinn (Embassy)
Finland (October 14, 1949) - Helsinki (Embassy)
France (February 20, 1880 - legation; November 29, 1938 - embassy) - Paris (Embassy)
- Lyon (Consulate-General)
- Marseille (Consulate-General)
- Strasbourg (Consulate-General)
Germany (1872) Greece (February 20, 1880 - legation; January 1, 1939 - embassy; interrupted, then re-established August 25, 1956) - Athens (Embassy)
- Thessaloniki (Consulate-General)
Holy See - Rome (Embassy)
Hungary (1920) Ireland - Dublin (Embassy)
Italy (April 23, 1873) Lithuania (August 26, 1924/September 13, 1991) - Vilnius (Embassy)
Luxembourg (December 10, 1910) - Luxembourg (Embassy)
Macedonia - Skopje (Embassy)
Moldova (1991) Montenegro (August 6, 2006) - Podgorica (Embassy)
Netherlands (February 13, 1880) - The Hague (Embassy)
Norway (April 3, 1917) - Oslo (Embassy)
Poland (February 9, 1919) - Warsaw (Embassy)
Portugal (1880) - Lisbon (Embassy)
Russia - Moscow (Embassy)
- Rostov-on-Don (Consulate-General)
- Saint Petersburg (Consulate-General)
Serbia (April 14/26, 1879 - legation; January 1, 1939 - embassy (from Yugoslavia); interrupted May 13, 1941; re-established January 24, 1945; March 1, 1956 - embassy) Slovakia (January 1, 1993) - Bratislava (Embassy)
Slovenia (August 28, 1992) - Ljubljana (Embassy)
Spain (1881/January 5, 1967) Sweden (November 1, 1916) - Stockholm (Embassy)
Switzerland (1911 - legation; December 24, 1962 - embassy) - Berne (Embassy)
Ukraine (1992) - Kiev (Embassy)
- Chernivtsi (Consulate-General)
- Odessa (Consulate-General)
United Kingdom (1880) - London (Embassy)
Oceania
Besides the countries listed, Romania also has relations with New Zealand (since 1969; the Romanian ambassador in Australia is accredited to New Zealand, while the New Zealand ambassador in Belgium is accredited to Romania); Estonia (restored September 13, 1991; the Romanian ambassador in Finland is accredited to Estonia, while the Estonian ambassador in Poland is accredited to Romania); Latvia (established January 3, 1922 and restored September 13, 1991; the Romanian ambassador in Lithuania is accredited to Latvia, while the Latvian ambassador in Poland is accredited to Romania); and Laos. Additionally, on April 6, 1919, Romania established relations with Czechoslovakia, which no longer exists.
Multilateral organizations
- Brussels (Permanent Missions to the European Union and NATO)
- Geneva (Permanent Missions to the United Nations and other International Organizations)
- Nairobi (Permanent Missions to the United Nations and other International Organizations)
- New York (Permanent Mission to the United Nations)
- Paris (Mission to OECD and UNESCO)
- Rome (Permanent Mission to FAO)
- Strasbourg (Permanent Mission to the Council of Europe)
- Vienna (Permanent Mission to the United Nations)
See also
External links
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Embassies of Romania. |
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Consulates of Romania. |
References
- ↑ List of Diplomatic Missions of Romania
- ↑ "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 2015-11-07. Retrieved 2015-11-06.