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| Tags: chess, innovations |
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#1
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The REAL inventor of the Gothic Chess piece, the "Chancellor".
http://www.rookhouse.com/blog/?p=164 Thanks, Morphy www.rookhouse.com |
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#2
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RookHouse wrote:
The REAL inventor of the Gothic Chess piece, the "Chancellor". http://www.rookhouse.com/blog/?p=164 Well, I sincerely hope that the inventors of Gothic Chess don't go around claiming that they invented the piece. Gothic Chess is just Capablanca chess with a different initial position. Dave. -- David Richerby Incredible Shack (TM): it's like a www.chiark.greenend.org.uk/~davidr/ house in the woods but it'll blow your mind! |
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#3
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On Mar 31, 2:12 pm, RookHouse wrote:
The REAL inventor of the Gothic Chess piece, the "Chancellor". http://www.rookhouse.com/blog/?p=164 As someone said at the time, most players would rather have larger brains than larger boards. |
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#4
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"Offramp" wrote in message ... On Mar 31, 2:12 pm, RookHouse wrote: The REAL inventor of the Gothic Chess piece, the "Chancellor". http://www.rookhouse.com/blog/?p=164 As someone said at the time, most players would rather have larger brains than larger boards. Is this reference to the guy who is trying to sell real-estate on Mars? [no joke] Phil Innes |
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#5
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On Mar 31, 5:50*pm, "Chess One" wrote:
"Offramp" wrote in message ... On Mar 31, 2:12 pm, RookHouse wrote: The REAL inventor of the Gothic Chess piece, the "Chancellor". http://www.rookhouse.com/blog/?p=164 As someone said at the time, most players would rather have larger brains than larger boards. Is this reference to the guy who is trying to sell real-estate on Mars? [no joke] Phil Innes LOL... too funny! Guess his backers(?) wanted him to raise some of the cash himself for his plans. Good thing he hasn't tried to sell the Brooklyn Bridge yet. |
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#6
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"Rob" wrote in message ... On Mar 31, 5:50 pm, "Chess One" wrote: "Offramp" wrote in message ... On Mar 31, 2:12 pm, RookHouse wrote: The REAL inventor of the Gothic Chess piece, the "Chancellor". http://www.rookhouse.com/blog/?p=164 As someone said at the time, most players would rather have larger brains than larger boards. Is this reference to the guy who is trying to sell real-estate on Mars? [no joke] Phil Innes LOL... too funny! **But real! I mean, I am not making an April Fool's joke. This is what he was up to. Guess his backers(?) wanted him to raise some of the cash himself for his plans. Good thing he hasn't tried to sell the Brooklyn Bridge yet. **More chance in resurrecting Fischer. Ken Burns already resold the bridge. PI |
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#7
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On Mar 31, 9:35 am, David Richerby
wrote: RookHouse wrote: The REAL inventor of the Gothic Chess piece, the "Chancellor". http://www.rookhouse.com/blog/?p=164 Well, I sincerely hope that the inventors of Gothic Chess don't go around claiming that they invented the piece. Gothic Chess is just Capablanca chess with a different initial position. But their initial position, with the Queen off to one side, is a rather strange one, although they claim it balances the board. If you swapped the Chancellor and the Archbishop, one could almost make that claim. John Savard |
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#8
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On Mar 31, 9:35 am, David Richerby
wrote: RookHouse wrote: The REAL inventor of theGothicChess piece, the "Chancellor". http://www.rookhouse.com/blog/?p=164 Well, I sincerely hope that the inventors ofGothicChess don't go around claiming that they invented the piece. GothicChess is just Capablancachess with a different initial position. It's worse than that. Capablanca Chess is just a game invented by Carrera in 1617 with a different initial position! Carerra's version from 1617: R Pr Kt B Q K B Kt Em R The Princess was called a Centaur, and the Empress was called a Campione. The board was 10 by 8, not 10 by 10. While the location of the Princess and Empress keeps the defense of the squares in front of the King and Queen the same, the fashion in Chess with added pieces has instead been to keep the King's castled position, with the Knight in a compact corner setup, unaltered. And so, much later, but decades before Capablanca, H. E. Bird took the same complement of pieces, again on a 10 by 8 board, with this arrangement: H. E. Bird's version from 1874: R Kt B Em Q K Pr B Kt R He called the Princess a Guard, and the Empress an Equerry. Note that he puts the weaker Princess on the Kingside, and the stronger Empress on the Queenside, the opposite of what was done by Carrera and Capablanca. And this is Capablanca Chess, from around 1921: R Kt Pr B Q K B Em Kt R I would tend to lean towards going with Bird's version, but exchanging the Guard and the Equerry, as the canonical version of the game with this piece complement, with Capablanca's and Carrera's layouts as possible alternates. John Savard |
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#9
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On Apr 6, 2:46 pm, Quadibloc wrote:
On Mar 31, 9:35 am, David Richerby wrote: RookHouse wrote: The REAL inventor of theGothicChess piece, the "Chancellor". http://www.rookhouse.com/blog/?p=164 Well, I sincerely hope that the inventors ofGothicChess don't go around claiming that they invented the piece. GothicChess is just Capablancachess with a different initial position. It's worse than that. Capablanca Chess is just a game invented by Carrera in 1617 with a different initial position! This has been played around with a lot of times. The nature of chess makes one wonder why the Knight isn't combined with other pieces. Carrera is one of the first to record this, and others built on it, including several top chess players, with Capablanca being the latest in a long line. There is even attempts to get them on an 8x8 board, all the way back to the 1970s by shifting the knights and their pawns up one space, and sticking them there. I actually dabbled with configuration, and it makes for an interesting game. People have used pocket pieces in the past, including gating recently. It can be argued that the Knight mixed with rook, bishop and queen is the top pieces for this. Anyhow, all this discussion is moot, if people can't get the pieces and board to play on them. You could go after the Gothic pieces, but I would wager you risk lawsuits if you deviate. Without pieces being readily available, there isn't much of a chance of mass adoption. People can wish me luck here as I attempt to try to get generic Capablanca type pieces available to the public. - Rich |
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#10
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Quadibloc wrote:
David Richerby wrote: Well, I sincerely hope that the inventors ofGothicChess don't go around claiming that they invented the piece. GothicChess is just Capablancachess with a different initial position. It's worse than that. Capablanca Chess is just a game invented by Carrera in 1617 with a different initial position! Hehe. Good job I didn't claim that Capablanca chess was any sort of stunning innovation, then. ;-) Thanks for the info. Dave. -- David Richerby Flammable Cheese (TM): it's like a www.chiark.greenend.org.uk/~davidr/ lump of cheese but it burns really easily! |
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