Wednesday, June 26, 2013

Basic Chess for beginners

History of chess     

     The history of chess spans some 1500 years. The earliest predecessors of the game originated in India, before the 6th century AD. From India, the game spread to Persia. When the Arabs conquered Persia, chess was taken up by the Muslim world and subsequently spread to Southern Europe. In Europe, chess evolved into roughly its current form in the 15th century. In the second half of the 19th century, modern chess tournament play began, and the first World Chess Championship was held in 1886. The 20th century saw great leaps forward in chess theory and the establishment of the World Chess Federation (FIDE). Developments in the 21st century include use of computers for analysis, which originated in the 1970s with the first programmed chess games on the market. Online gaming appeared in the mid-1990s


Origin of chess


                  Where chess was born may forever remain a mystery, but we do know where chess incubated.Persia, now Iran, at one time comprised of much of the mid-east, parts of Russia, Greece and all of Egypt. In this great empire chess, or some form of chess, was played increasingly by more and more people. Chatrang (Indian) in the form of the more developed shatranj (Arabic) was known to be played in Persia in the 6th century and when the newly founded Islam conquered Persia in the 7th century, the Muslims embraced the game. From the 8th century up to the 11th century, Islam swept across the Mediteranean, introducing this game to Sicily and to the Iberian peninsula.
This medieval game was very similar to the game we play today. But it was very different as well. The main differences were the moves of the pieces we now call the Bishop and the Queen, the the two move option of the pawn (and, of course, en passant) didn't exist; pawn promotion and castling. (as well as the strategies and tactics inherent to the differences) Briefly, the Queen originally was the weakest piece on the board, moving one adjacent, diagonal square at a time; the Bishop could leap over adjacent diagonal squares to the square beyond that diagonal; pawns moved one sqaure at a time, even on their first move and promotion wasn't usually part of the game; castling wasn't yet invented but the King could leap 2 squares on it's first move (in fact, this was called a King-leap or a King-jump); originally, the game was played on a non-checkered, 64-squared board; stalemate counted as a win; Baring the King (capturing all the opponent's men) was the usual way of winning. (see: Shatranj) By 1475, all these changes except for castling had somewhat solidified thanks to Guttenberg and to the progressive chess thinkers in Valencia, Spain and in the cities of Italy. Castling would require more than another century to be codified.
I've glossed over the origins of chess because, while it's important, the game played before 1475 was really not chess, but a proto-chess or pre-chess.
The assumption [though this would be a great over-simplification] is that chess was born when this game was played and published as the basis for the poem, Eschacs d’amor, somewhere between 1475 and 1490.



Old Chess Pieces



                    Real-size resin reproductions of 
                    the 12th century Lewis chessmen
                    The top row shows king, queen, and
                    bishop. The bottom row shows 

                    knight, rook, and pawn.