Comturist was the name of the hard currency luxury shops that existed in Communist Romania, managed by the Ministry of Tourism. After the 1989 Romanian revolution, these stores became obsolete and were sold off in 1991 to private business owners; as a result of this sale by auction, the Comturist name is still in existence today in a more limited capacity as a chain of duty-free stores.
Comturist was the name of the hard currency luxury shops that existed in Communist Romania, managed by the Ministry of Tourism. After the 1989 Romanian revolution, these stores became obsolete and were sold off in 1991 to private business owners; as a result of this sale by auction, the Comturist name is still in existence today in a more limited capacity as a chain of duty-free stores.
About 200 Comturist stores were in existence in Romania by 1977, mainly in the largest cities and tourist areas. The Comturist stores existed explicitly to offer items that were not allowed to be sold in the then mainstream Romanian socialist economy. Imports from western Europe, North America and Japan were sold in these shops, such as: alcohol, tobacco, perfume, shoes, clothing, radios, televisions, calculators and, by the 1980s, personal computers. High-quality Romanian souvenirs were also sold, such as: sheepskin, handicrafts, folk costumes and folk music records.
Discovered by embedding cosine similarity (sentence-transformers MiniLM, 384-dim).