NO
Albania does not touch the Black Sea.
The Balkan countries are Albania, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Bulgaria, Croatia, Greece, Macedonia, Montenegro, and Serbia. A coastline is another word for a coast or border with the sea, so this question asks which of the Balkan countries are landlocked. Most of these countries border either the Aegean Sea, the Ionian Sea, the Adriatic Sea or the Black Sea. However, both Macedonia and Serbia are fully landlocked with no coastline.
the national flower of Albania is black poppy.
nearer countries are who are in the border attached: Romania, Greece, Macedonia, Serbia, Turkey without border nearest are: Albania, Croatia, Bosna-Herzegovina, Montenegro, Hungary
The Albania flag is red with a black crest in the center.
Albanian flag consist of a red background, and a black double-headed eagle symbol. The red background is to recognise the blood we have shed for our freedom. The eagle is black because Albanian eagles are black. Double headed is to represent the Albanian territories that remained outside of the Albanian state border (one head for Albania one for the territories outside of Albania).
The red and black poppy.
In Algeria, green, red and white. In Albania, red and black.
Southern European countries include Portugal, Spain, Andorra, Malta, Italy, San Marino, Vatican City, Slovenia, Croatia, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Montenegro, Albania, Serbia, Kosovo, Macedonia, Bulgaria, Greece, Cyprus, and Turkey. Larger bodies of water include the Mediterranean Sea, the Adriatic Sea, the Ionian Sea, the Sea of Sardinia, the Sea of Sicily, the Black Sea, and the Aegean Sea.
The Albanian flag is black and red.
Slovenia is a country in central Europe with a short coast (46km) on the Adriatic Sea. It is bordered by Austria to the north, Croatia in the south, Italy to the west and it shares a short border with Hungary to the northeast. In ancient times Illyrian and Celtic peoples inhabited the area, which was ruled by Rome after the first century BC. and settled by Slavs in the sixth century AD. Slovenia came under Austrian control after 1335 and joined the Kingdom of Serbs, Croats, and Slovenes (later Yugoslavia) in 1918. During World War II Slovenia was divided among Germany, Italy, and Hungary, but returned to Yugoslavia after the war. Slovenia declared its independence from Yugoslavia in June 1991. Ljubljana is the capital and largest city. Population: 2,010,000.
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