Capablanca chess
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Capablanca Chess (or Capablanca's Chess) is a chess variant invented in the 1920s by former World Chess Champion José Raúl Capablanca. It incorporates two new pieces and is played on a 10×8 board. He believed that chess would be played out in a few decades (meaning games between grandmasters would always end in draws). This threat of "draw death" for chess was his main motivation for creating a more complex and richer version of the game.
- The chancellor combines powers of a rook and a knight.
- The archbishop combines powers of a bishop and a knight.
The new pieces have properties that enrich the game. For example, the archbishop by itself can checkmate a lone king (king in a corner, archbishop placed diagonally with one square in between).
Piece setup
Capablanca proposed two opening setups for Capablanca Chess. His final revision placed the chancellor between the queen and queen's bishop; the archbishop between the king and king's bishop. He also experimented with 10×10 board sizes, where the pawns could move up to three squares on the initial move.
In his book The Adventure of Chess, Edward Lasker writes (p. 39):
...I played many test games with Capablanca, and they rarely lasted more than twenty or twenty-five moves. We tried boards of 10×10 squares and 10×8 squares, and we concluded that the latter was preferable because hand-to-hand fights start earlier on it.
Lasker was one of the few supporters. Hungarian grandmaster Géza Maróczy also played some games with Capablanca (who got the better of him). British champion William Winter thought that there were too many strong pieces, making the minor pieces less relevant.
The names for new pieces, archbishop and chancellor, were introduced by Capablanca himself. These names are still used in most modern variants of Capablanca Chess.
Variants predating Capablanca Chess
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Capablanca was not the first person to add the chancellor and the archbishop to the normal chess set, though he is the most famous. Other attempts mostly differ only by the arrangement of pieces and the castling rules.
In 1617, Pietro Carrera published a book Il Gioco degli Scacchi, which contained a description of a chess variant played on 8×10 board. He placed new pieces between a rook and a knight. Chancellor was on the king's side and archbishop on the queen's side. Carrera used names champion instead of chancellor and centaur instead of archbishop. The game was largely forgotten after the death of the inventor.
In 1874, Henry Bird proposed a chess variant similar to Carrera's variant. The only significant difference was the opening setup (the same as Capablanca Chess). Bird used names guard instead of chancellor and equerry instead of archbishop.
Variants postdating Capablanca Chess
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Capablanca Chess has inspired a number of chess variants:
- Grand Chess (1984) by Christian Freeling
- Omega Chess (1988) by Daniel MacDonald
- Gothic Chess (1998) by Edward A. Trice
- Aberg's variation (2003) by Hans Aberg
- Grotesque Chess (2004) by Fergus Duniho
- Paulovich's variation (2004) by David Paulovich
- Ladorean Chess (2005) by Bernhard U. Hermes
- Embassy Chess (2005) by Kevin Hill
- Univers Chess (2006) by Fergus Duniho
- Schoolbook Chess (2006) by Sam Trenholme
- Modern Capablanca Random Chess (2008) by José Carrillo
It is noteworthy that Embassy Chess uses a starting position identical to Grand Chess adapted to a 10×8 board.
Another interesting recent development is Capablanca Random Chess, invented in 2004 by Reinhard Scharnagl. This game combines ideas of Fischer Random Chess and Capablanca Chess. It also applies the principle which demands that all pawns in the starting positions are protected by at least one piece.
Variants using a different board
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There are also variants of Capablanca Chess that do not use the standard 10×8 board. Grand Chess is a popular chess variant invented by Dutch game designer Christian Freeling in 1984. It uses Capablanca Chess pieces upon a larger, 10×10 board.
In 2007 Grandmaster Yasser Seirawan devised a variant (called Seirawan chess), which adds the two pieces to the standard game in a different manner. The player, after moving a piece (for example, a bishop) from the first rank, may immediately place either of the two pieces on the bishop's square. If the player moves all his eight starting pieces without placing the hawk or the elephant (Seirawan's names for the archbishop and the chancellor, respectively), he forfeits his right to do so.
See also
- ChessV—a program (licensed under the GPL) which plays Capablanca Chess and all of the other proposed 10×8 setups, as well as several other chess variants against the computer.
- SMIRF—a program which plays all 12,118 Capablanca Random Chess variants except Gothic chess.
References
Bibliography
- Lasker, Edward (1959). The Adventure of Chess. ISBN 0-486-20510-X.
Further reading
- Pritchard, D. B. (1994). The Encyclopedia of Chess Variants. Games & Puzzles Publications. pp. 38–40. ISBN 0-9524142-0-1.
- Pritchard, D. B. (2007). Beasley, John, ed. The Classified Encyclopedia of Chess Variants. John Beasley. p. 122. ISBN 978-0-9555168-0-1.
External links
- "Capablanca's Chess" by Hans Bodlaender, The Chess Variant Pages
- Capablanca Chess | material values of pieces
- Capablanca Chess at BoardGameGeek