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Encyclopedia > Gosudarstvennyj Universalnyj Magazin
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GUM

State Universal Store, Gosudarstvennyi Universalnyi Magazin, GUM (ГУМ, Государственный Универсальный Магазин) is a common name for the main department store in many cities of the Soviet Union and some post-Soviet states, including Russian Federation and Belarus. Here "GUM" is pronounced goom.


There was another, basically the same, type of department store called Central Universal Store, Tsentralnyi Universalnyi Magazin, TsUM (ЦУМ).


The most famous GUM is a large store in Red Square, Moscow, Russian Federation.


Moscow GUM

Taking up nearly the entirety of the eastern side of Red Square, the GUM was built between 1890 and 1893 by Alexander Pomerantsev. The building features an interesting combination of elements of Russian medieval architecture and a steel framework and glass roof, a similar style to the great Victorian train stations of London. It was built to replace the Upper Trading Rows that burnt down in 1825. By the time of the Russian Revolution of 1917, the building contained some 1,200 stores.


After the Revolution the GUM was nationalised and continued to work as a department store until Josef Stalin turned it into office space in 1928 for the committee in charge of his first Five Year Plan. After the suicide of Stalin's wife Nadezhda in 1932, the GUM was used to display her body.


After reopening as a department store, the GUM became one of the few stores in the Soviet Union that was not plagued by shortages of consumer goods, and the queues to purchase anything were long, often extending all across Red Square.


It is still open today, and is a popular tourist destination for those visiting Moscow. Many of the stores feature high-fashion brand names familiar in the west; locals refer to these as the "exhibitions of prices", the joke being that no one could afford to actually buy any of the items on display.


  Results from FactBites:
 
Gum (3108 words)
Originally, gumming happened after printing and before perforation, usually because the paper had to be damp for printing to work well, but in modern times most stamp printing is done dry on pregummed paper.
On early issues, gum was applied by hand, using a brush or roller, but in 1880 De La Rue came up with a machine gumming process using a printing press, and gum is now always applied by machine.
The gum is universally spread as uniformly as possible, but a 1946 local issue by the town of Finsterwalde in Germany used an economy process where the back of the stamp had a regular pattern of circular bare patches.
  More results at FactBites »


 

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