|
The
laws of Chess and the movement of the
traditional Chess pieces have been the same
since the sixth century of the second
millennium. The changes that took place have
quickened up the rate of play, such as allowing
the Pawns to move two cells on the first move
option (FMO). The origins of Chess are obscure.
Some evidence
presented by David Li in
“Genealogy
of Chess”
quite clearly shows it was developed in China in
the 2nd century B.C.
but it is not until the 7th century that
there is a reference to the game in literature.
The first mention of Chess is found in a Persian
poem according to which the advent of the game
took place in India. Chess migrated to Persia
(Iran) during the reigns of King Chosroe-I
Annshiravan (531-579) as described in a Persian
book of this period. This book described Chess
terminology and the names and function of the
pieces in some detail.
According to
some sources (Forbes, History of Chess,
1860) the game was invented between four or five
thousand years ago, by the wife of King Ravana
of Ceylon, when the capital was besieged by Rama.
Chess
is also mentioned in the poems of Firdousi, a
Persian poet of the 10th century in which he
describes gifts being introduced by a convoy
from the Rajah of India at the court of the
Persing King Chosroe-I. Amongst these gifts was
a game depicting the battle of two armies.
Records show that there were originally four
types of piece used in Chess. Shatrang (Indian
Sanskrit) means ‘four’ and anga means
‘detachment’. In the Sassanid dynasty (242-651
AD) a book was written in the Middle Persian
Pahlavi language called ‘Chatrang namakwor’ (A
Manual of Chess). Shatrang (Chess) represents
the universe, according to ancient Indian
mysticism. The four sides being the four
elements (fire, air, earth and water), and the
four ‘humors’ of man. Although the names of the
pieces are different in various countries today,
their movements are strikingly similar. In
Persia the word ‘Shatranj’ was used for the name
of Chess itself.
In
the 8th century the Moors invaded Spain and
Chess spread to Europe. The game found its way
to the western world after the Moslems conquered
lands from India and Persia to the East, and
Spain to the West. The first reference to Chess
is found in the Catalonian Testament of 1010 AD.
A Chess set was presented as a gift to
Charlemagne from the famous Moslem ruler Haroon-al-Rashid.
The Muslims also conquered Sicily, and the game
reached Russia probably through the
Caspian-Volga trade routes. The names of the
Russian pieces clearly indicates the Persian and
Arabic origin of the game.
In
Russian folk poems Chess is mentioned as a
popular game. The Vikings carried the game to
north-western Europe via the Baltic. Chess
arrived in Germany around the 11th century, with
the earliest reference to Chess being made by a
monk ‘Froumund von Tegermsee’. Chess spread to
Italy from Germany and later on to England and
Ireland. Chess also reached Scandanavia by the
11th century and Bohemia from Italy. The growing
popularity of Chess is proven by the vast amount
of literature that has been printed over the
last few centuries.
The
oldest of these (Mansubat) were penned by the
Arab author Al-Aldi in the 9th century who also
mentioned the differences between the Hindu and
Persian rules of the game. Blindfold play,
qualifying contests, Chess problems (mansubat),
the first Chess book and tournaments were known
as early as the 7th century. Today, the game of
traditional Chess is very similar to the
original game that was played in India 1400+
years ago (i.e., the game-tree has not been
altered significantly). Chesmayne allows any
game-tree to be used for play.
Today
there are 149 Chess playing countries belonging
to FIDE. In the last few centuries traditional
Chess has truly become international in appeal.
Chess is exciting, demanding skill, and the
result is unpredictable. It is not a physical
contest, and there is no element of luck as in
card games. In oriental warfare, a battle could
be decided by the death or capture of the King,
which in Chess is known as Shah-mat (checkmate,
++CM). So two armies line up against each other.
One can try head-on assault or patient
outflanking manoeuvres. One can try bluff, or
offer poisoned pawns, or make sacrifices in
order to ambush the enemy and capture the
commander-in-chief, the King.
The
Persians took up Indian Chess with enthusiasm.
The caliphs, rulers of the Moslem world, kept
Chess professionals at court through the 9th and
10th centuries. Chess was brought to Europe by
the Moors in Spain before AD 1,000. There was
great confusion throughout medieval Europe
concerning the pieces names. The elephants
became archers in Spain, Standard-Bearers in
Italy, couriers in Germany, court jesters in
France, and BSs in Portugal, England, Ireland
and Iceland. The ‘rukh’ (war chariot) was
another enigma. In 1527, an Italian poet, Vida,
fancifully identified the Rook as an elephant
with a tower on his back, as used by Hannibal
seventeen centuries earlier. This caught on, but
the elephant was costly to carve, and
disappeared leaving only the tower.
Europe’s
first big contribution to Chess came about AD
1,000 - a chequered board to assist the eye
(before this time the board was unchequered).
Please see Shogi for further details (Japanese
Chess). A century later came the second -
speeding the :&O (opening) by giving pawns the
option of moving two cells on the first move (FMO).
About 1580 an Italian suggested making the Queen
the strongest piece instead of the weakest.
Promotion of a pawn, hitherto a minor incident,
became cataclysmic. The average game was halved
in length. At the same time, the piece we call a
Bishop, previously very restricted was
de-limited. The new game was nicknamed ‘Scacchi
all rabiosa’ (crazy Chess) by the Italians, and
by the French, ‘Echecs de la dame enragee’
(Chess of the maddened Queen).
But
it swept Europe like a forest fire, except
Russia, where the masses stuck to the old game
for over two more centuries. Italy took over
from Spain as the leading Chess country in the
17th century. In the 18th century, supremacy
passed to France. About 1840, London became the
main Chess center. The first international Chess
tournament was held in London in 1851. It was
won by Adolf Anderssen, a German professor of
mathematics. The fantastic advance of Chess in
the 20th century is best shown by figures.
Before 1923 there were rarely more than four
international tournaments in a year. Between
1923 and 1939, the average was six. After WW II
this quadrupled. In 1974 it jumped to 60, in
1975 to 75, in 1976 to 100.
By
the end of 1990 the number had increased to well
over 1,000 registered tournaments. In 1924 FIDE
had a dozen member countries. In 1990 it had
127. Every two years, a world teams’ tourney is
held, known as the Chess Olympiad. The number of
entries in 1927 was 16. By 1990 it reached 108
teams. Women’s Olympiads started in 1957 with 21
teams, increasing to a record 65 in 1990. Russia
(or the former Soviet Union) first competed in
an Olympiad in 1952 and has won all but two
since then. Only for three years since 1948 has
there been a non-Russian (Soviet) champion.
Bobby Fischer (USA) won crushingly in 1972 but
did not defend in 1975 when the title went to
Anatoly Karpov by default. In 1985 Karpov lost
the title to 22-year old Garry Kasparov in a
marathon struggle lasting 72 games, starting in
September 1984.
The
challenger is found after three years of
elimination tournaments, and matches start with
Zonal tournaments, continuing with interzonals
and culminating with Candidates’ matches.
Women’s World Championships are played under
similar procedures. The title of Chess Champion
of the World dates strictly from 1886, but it
has been conferred retrospectively from 1866 by
general consent. Before that, there were players
recognized as supreme in their time. The
following list will not be disputed by most
mature players:
01
Andre Danican Philidor (France) 1747-1795 •
02
Louis Charles Mahe de la Bourdonnais (France)
1821-1840 •
03
Howard Staunton (England) 1843-1851 •
04
Adolf Anderssen (Germany) 1851-1858 •
05
Paul Morphy (U.S.A. Irish/Spanish/French)
1958-1959 •
06
William Steinitz (born
Austrian) 1866-1894 •
07
Dr Emanuel Lasker (born German) 1894-1921 •
08
Jose Raul Capablanca (Cuba) 1921-1927 •
09
Dr Alexander Alekhine (born Russian) 1927-1935 •
10
Dr Max Euwe (Holland) 1935-1937 •
11
Dr Alexander Alekhine (died still Champion, FIDE
took control) 1937-1946 •
12
Dr Mikhail Botvinnik (Russia) 1948-1957 •
13
Vassily Smyslov (Russia) 1957-1958 •
14
Dr Mikhail Botvinnik 1958-1960 •
15
Mikhail Tal (Russia) 1960-1961 •
16
Dr Mikhail Botvinnik 1961-1963 •
17
Tigran Petrosian (U.S.S.R.) 1963-1969 •
18
Boris Spassky (Russia) 1969-1972 •
19
Bobby Fischer (U.S.A.) 1972-1975
•
20
Anatoly Karpov (Russia) 1975-1985
•
21
Garry Kasparov (Russia) 1985-?
Until
the present century, traditional Chess (:L01 of
Chesmayne) was regarded as a game for the
wealthy and leisured classes in society. It is
the national sport in Russia, where it is more
popular than football. Indeed, Russian Chess
players have dominated world Chess since the
1940s, although their superiority is fast being
challenged by Britain, which is now established
as a strong Chess playing nation. Compare it
with draughts or the Japanese game of Go (nearly
all strategy). Chess also has the advantage of
its finely differentiated playing pieces. They
are not merely rounded lumps of wood or stone
but individuals, each with h/er own power and
attributes.
It
is easy to identify with one’s Chess pieces.
Losing a game of draughts never results in the
same sense of deep personal loss that one has
when the KI is ++CM. It is a game that involves
the mind completely. Chess combines elements of
both art and science, what the Dutch call
Denksport. Analyzing a Chess game is primarily
an exercise in logic, yet arriving at a
beautiful checkmating attack or a profound
strategical position can bring a genuine sense
of creative satisfaction. There is also the
competitive aspect of the game. Chess is not a
solitary exercise, like solving a crossword
puzzle, but a battle between two individuals, a
struggle of mind and will.
Above
all, Chess provides a sense of continuity with
the past - of belonging to a great Chess-playing
family extending through thousands of years and
embracing all nations from the time of the
Egyptian Kings to the present day (and probably
before as well). In the text you will find games
played over a century ago (:L01) which still
arouse admiration in those who play through them
today. Perhaps one day, new players who are now
taking up Chess (Chesmayne) will find some of
their own efforts gracing the literature of this
fascinating game.
Traditional
Chess is one of the world’s most played board
games. It has an old and distinguished pedigree,
developed for over five centuries. The wisdom of
antiquity has bequeathed it to succeeding
generations. Of the various occidental board
games, Chess is the King. It is the one
practiced most widely and has the
most-documented and carefully written theory to
back it up. Goethe called Chess ‘the touchstone
of the intellect’. The story of Chess is amongst
one of the most extraordinary inventions in our
history, which draws extensively on legend,
mythology and symbolism and must rank amongst
the greatest stories ever told.
Its
theme is the vast and bewildering complexity of
the universe of thought - an inspiring symbol of
the desire to explore and penetrate the
uttermost reaches of the imagination. An eternal
book - somehow impinging on infinity itself - a
never-ending story - a mirror of the infinite
possibilities of the human mind and one of the
purest forms of communication with a unique and
unusual set of symbols. This symbolic world of
weightless thoughts is real, vital, and filled
with significance. It seems we are mysteriously
connected to the universe. We are mirrored in
it, just as the entire evolution of the universe
is mirrored in us. However, like frogs, sooner
or later we have to step outside our limited
sensorium.
In
this section the reader is taken through the
delightful account of the landmarks and
discoveries and pays tribute to the Chess
players who made contributions, both large and
small, not only as painstaking observers of the
game, but also as outstanding wo/men of vision
whose conclusions were often ahead of their
time. We have traveled through the ages to
accumulate a battery of sound Chess theories and
along this road circuitous detours carried many
thinkers far and wide through a wilderness.
At
this juncture we must put the whole achievement
into perspective and it is well to make some
preliminary comments about the state of Chess as
it now stands. To settle a group of students a
teacher will first tell them a light story when
they first come into the classroom, just to put
them at ease, focused, and then kind of lead
them into. |