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Bishop (chess)

The bishop (♗, ♝) is a piece in the game of chess. It moves and captures along diagonals without jumping over intervening pieces. Each player begins the game with two bishops. The starting squares are c1 and f1 for White's bishops, and c8 and f8 for Black's bishops.

White bishop
Black bishop

Placement and movement

The king's bishop is placed on f1 for White and f8 for Black; the queen's bishop is placed on c1 for White and c8 for Black.

The bishop has no restrictions in distance for each move but is limited to diagonal movement. It cannot jump over other pieces. A bishop captures by occupying the square on which an enemy piece stands. As a consequence of its diagonal movement, each bishop always remains on one square color. Due to this, it is common to refer to a bishop as a light-squared or dark-squared bishop.

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Initial placement of the bishops
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The black bishop can move to any of the squares marked by a black dot. The white bishop can move to any square marked by a white dot or capture the black pawn.

Comparison – other pieces

Versus rook

A rook is generally worth about two pawns more than a bishop. The bishop has access to only half of the squares on the board, whereas all squares of the board are accessible to the rook. On an empty board, a rook attacks fourteen squares regardless of position, whereas a bishop attacks no more than thirteen (from one of four center squares) and sometimes as few as seven (from sides and corners). A king and rook can force checkmate against a lone king, whereas a king and bishop cannot.[1] A king and two bishops on opposite-colored squares, however, can force mate.

Versus knight

Knights and bishops are each worth about three pawns. This means bishops are approximately equal in strength to knights, but depending on the game situation, either may have a distinct advantage.

Less experienced players tend to underrate the bishop compared to the knight because the knight can reach all squares and is more adept at forking. More experienced players understand the power of the bishop.[2]

Bishops usually gain in relative strength towards the endgame as more pieces are captured and more open lines become available on which they can operate. A bishop can easily influence both wings simultaneously, whereas a knight is less capable of doing so. In an open endgame, a pair of bishops is decidedly superior to either a bishop and a knight, or two knights. A player possessing a pair of bishops has a strategic weapon in the form of a long-term threat to trade down to an advantageous endgame.[1]

Two bishops on opposite-colored squares and king can force checkmate against a lone king, whereas two knights cannot. A bishop and knight can force mate, but with far greater difficulty than two bishops.

In certain positions a bishop can by itself lose a move (see triangulation and tempo), while a knight can never do so. The bishop is capable of skewering or pinning a piece, while the knight can do neither. A bishop can in some situations hinder a knight from moving. In these situations, the bishop is said to be "dominating" the knight.

On the other hand, in the opening and middlegame a bishop may be hemmed in by pawns of both players, and thus be inferior to a knight which can jump over them. A knight check cannot be blocked but a bishop check can. Furthermore, on a crowded board a knight has many tactical opportunities to fork two enemy pieces. A bishop can fork, but opportunities are more rare. One such example occurs in the position illustrated, which arises from the Ruy Lopez: 1.e4 e5 2.Nf3 Nc6 3.Bb5 a6 4.Ba4 Nf6 5.0-0 b5 6.Bb3 Be7 7.d4 d6 8.c3 Bg4 9.h3!? Bxf3 10.Qxf3 exd4 11.Qg3 g6 12.Bh6!

Bishop dominating a knight
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The knight cannot move to any of its four legal squares without being captured by the white bishop.
Example of bishop fork
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After 12...Nxe4?, the forking 13.Bd5! wins material after, e.g., 13...Nxg3 14.Bxc6+ Qd7 15.Bxd7+ Kxd7 16.fxg3.

Game use

Good bishop and bad bishop

Krasenkow vs. Zvjaginsev
FIDE World Chess Championship 2004
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Position after 23.Rxa1

In the middlegame, a player with only one bishop should generally place friendly pawns on squares of the color that the bishop cannot move to. This allows the player to control squares of both colors, allows the bishop to move freely among the pawns, and helps fix enemy pawns on squares on which they can be attacked by the bishop. Such a bishop is often referred to as a "good" bishop.

Conversely, a bishop which is impeded by friendly pawns is often referred to as a "bad bishop" (or sometimes, disparagingly, a "tall pawn"). The black light-squared bishop in the French Defense is a notorious example of this concept. A "bad" bishop, however, need not always be a weakness, especially if it is outside its own pawn chains. In addition, having a "bad" bishop may be advantageous in an opposite-colored bishops endgame. Even if the bad bishop is passively placed, it may serve a useful defensive function; a well-known quip from GM Mihai Suba is that "Bad bishops protect good pawns."[3]

In the position from the game Krasenkow versus Zvjaginsev,[4] a thicket of black pawns hems in Black's bishop on c8, so Black is effectively playing with one piece fewer than White. Although the black pawns also obstruct the white bishop on e2, it has many more attacking possibilities, and thus is a good bishop vis-à-vis Black's bad bishop. Black resigned after another ten moves.

Fianchetto

A bishop may be fianchettoed, for example after moving the g2 pawn to g3 and the bishop on f1 to g2. This can form a strong defense for the castled king on g1 and the bishop can often exert strong pressure on the long diagonal (here h1–a8). A fianchettoed bishop should generally not be given up lightly, since the resulting holes in the pawn formation may prove to be serious weaknesses, particularly if the king has castled on that side of the board.

There are nonetheless some modern opening lines where a fianchettoed bishop is given up for a knight in order to double the opponent's pawns, for example 1.d4 g6 2.c4 Bg7 3.Nc3 c5 4.d5 Bxc3+!? 5.bxc3 f5, a sharp line originated by Roman Dzindzichashvili. Giving up a fianchettoed queen's bishop for a knight is usually less problematic. For example, in KarpovBrowne, San Antonio 1972, after 1.c4 c5 2.b3 Nf6 3.Bb2 g6?!, Karpov gave up his fianchettoed bishop with 4.Bxf6! exf6 5.Nc3, doubling Black's pawns and giving him a hole on d5.[5]

Endgame

An endgame in which each player has only one bishop, one controlling the dark squares and the other the light, will often result in a draw even if one player has a pawn or sometimes two more than the other. The players tend to gain control of squares of opposite colors, and a deadlock results. In endgames with same-colored bishops, however, even a positional advantage may be enough to win.[6]

Bishops on opposite colors

       

Endgames in which each player has only one bishop (and no other pieces besides the king) and the bishops are on opposite colors are often drawn, even when one side has an extra pawn or two. Many of these positions would be a win if the bishops were on the same color.

H. Wolf vs. P. Leonhardt, 1905
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Draw with either side to move
Bogoljubov vs. Blümich, 1925
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Position after 28...Kf8

The position from Wolf versus Leonhardt (see diagram) shows an important defensive setup. Black can make no progress, since the white bishop ties the black king to defending the pawn on g4 and it also prevents the advance ...f3+ because it would simply capture the pawn – then either the other pawn is exchanged for the bishop (an immediate draw) or the pawn advances (an easily drawn position). Otherwise the bishop alternates between the squares d1 and e2.[7]

If two pawns are connected, they normally win if they reach their sixth rank, otherwise the game may be a draw (as above). If two pawns are separated by one file they usually draw, but win if they are farther apart.[8]

In some cases with more pawns on the board, it is actually advantageous to have the bishops on opposite colors if one side has weak pawns. In the 1925 game Efim BogoljubovMax Blümich (see diagram), White wins because of the bishops being on opposite colors making Black weak on the black squares, the weakness of Black's isolated pawns on the queenside, and the weak doubled pawns on the kingside.[9] The game continued:[10]

29.Kd2 Ke7 30.Kc3 f6 31.Kd4 Be6 32.Kc5 Kd7 33.Kb6 g5 34.Kxa6 Kc7 35.Bb6+ Kc8 36.Bc5 Kc7 37.Bf8 f5 38.Bxg7 f4 39.Bf6 f3 40.gxf3 exf3 41.Bxg5 Bxh3 42.Bf4+ 1–0

Wrong bishop

In an endgame with a bishop, in some cases the bishop is the "wrong bishop", meaning that it is on the wrong color of square for some purpose (usually promoting a pawn). For example, with just a bishop and a rook pawn, if the bishop cannot control the promotion square of the pawn, it is said to be the "wrong bishop" or the pawn is said to be the wrong rook pawn. This results in some positions being drawn (by setting up a fortress) which otherwise would be won.

History

 
Antique Indian chess bishop represented by the camel, carved from sandalwood
 
Elephant chess piece from the Charlemagne chessmen, 11th century
 
A pre-Staunton bishop
 
Camel chess pieces, from a Mongolian set
 
The bishops in the Lewis chessmen
 
A white bishop

The bishop's predecessor in medieval chess, shatranj (originally chaturanga), was the alfil, meaning "elephant", which could leap two squares along any diagonal, and could jump over an intervening piece. As a consequence, each fil was restricted to eight squares, and no fil could attack another. The modern bishop first appeared shortly after 1200 in Courier chess.[11] A piece with this move, called a cocatriz or crocodile, is part of the Grande Acedrex in the Libro de los juegos compiled in 1283 for King Alfonso X of Castile. The game is attributed to "India", then a very vague term.[12] About half a century later Muḥammad ibn Maḥmud al-Āmulī, in his Treasury of the Sciences, describes an expanded form of chess with two pieces moving "like the rook but obliquely".[13] The bishop was also independently invented in Japan at about the same time (the 13th century), where it formed part of sho shogi and dai shogi; it remains present in modern shogi as the direct descendant of sho shogi.

Derivatives of alfil survive in the languages of the two countries where chess was first introduced within Western Europe—Italian (alfiere) and Spanish (alfil).[14] It was known as the aufin in French,[15] or the aufin, alphin, or archer in early English.[16]

The earliest references to bishops on the chessboard are two 13th-century Latin texts, De Vetula and Quaedam moralitas de scaccario.[17][18] The etymology of "bishop" comes from Old English bisceop "bishop, high priest," from Late Latin episcopus, from Greek episkopos "watcher, overseer." The term "bishop" as applied specifically to the chess piece was first recorded in the 16th century, with the first known written example dating back to the 1560s.[16] In all other Germanic languages, except for Icelandic, it is called various names, all of which directly translate to English as "runner" or "messenger". In Icelandic, however, it is called "biskup",[19] with the same meaning as in English. The use of the term in Icelandic predates that of the English language, as the first mentioning of "biskup" in Icelandic texts dates back to the early part of the 14th century, while the 12th-century Lewis Chessmen portray the bishop as an unambiguously ecclesiastical figure. In the Saga of Earl Mágus, which was written in Iceland somewhere between 1300–1325, it is described how an emperor was checkmated by a bishop. This has led to some speculations as to the origin of the English use of the term "bishop".[20][21][citation needed]

The canonical chessmen date back to the Staunton chess set of 1849. The piece's deep groove symbolizes a bishop's (or abbot's) mitre. Some have written that the groove originated from the original form of the piece, an elephant[22][23] with the groove representing the elephant's tusks.[24] The English apparently chose to call the piece a bishop because the projections at the top resembled a mitre.[25] This groove was interpreted differently in different countries as the game moved to Europe; in France, for example, the groove was taken to be a jester's cap, hence in France the bishop is called fou, the "jester"[26] and in Romania the nebun (madman).[27]

In some Slavic languages (e.g. Czech/Slovak) the bishop is called střelec/strelec, which directly translates to English as a "shooter" meaning an archer, while in others it is still known as "elephant" (e.g. Russian slon). In South Slavic languages it is usually known as lovac, meaning "hunter", or laufer, taken from the German name for the same piece (laufer is also a co-official Polish name for the piece alongside goniec). An alternative name for bishop in Russian is "officer" (Russian: офицер); it is also called αξιωματικός (axiomatikos) in Greek, афіцэр (afitser) in Belarusian and oficeri in Albanian.

In Mongolian and several Indian languages it is called the "camel".

In Lithuanian it is the rikis, a kind of military commander in medieval Lithuania.

In Latvia it is known as laidnis, a term for the wooden handle part of some firearms.[28]

Name translations

Overview of chess piece names
Language

Bishop Translation
Afrikaans L Loper runner
Albanian F Fili / Oficeri elephant / officer
Arabic ف فيل (fīl) elephant
Azerbaijani F Fil elephant
Armenian Փ Փիղ (P῾ił) elephant
Basque A Alfila
Belarusian (Taraškievica) А афіцэр officer
Bengali H গজ / হাতি (gôj / hāti) Elephant
Bulgarian О офицер officer
Catalan A alfil
Chinese B (xiàng) elephant
Czech S střelec shooter
Danish L løber runner
Dutch L loper / raadsheer runner / counsellor
English B bishop
Esperanto K kuriero courier
Estonian[29] O oda spear
Finnish L lähetti messenger
French F fou jester
Galician B bispo bishop
Georgian კუ (ku) tortoise
German[30] L Läufer runner
Greek Α αξιωματικός (axiomatikós) officer
Hindi O ऊँट (ūṁṭ) camel
Hebrew ר רץ (Ratz) runner
Hausa G giwa elephant
Hungarian F futó runner
Icelandic B biskup bishop
Ido E episkopo bishop
Indonesian G gajah elephant
Interslavic L lovec hunter
Irish E easpag bishop
Italian A alfiere standard-bearer
Japanese B ビショップ (bishoppu)
Javanese M mentri minister
Kannada ರಥ (ratha) chariot
Kazakh П піл (pil) elephant
Korean B 비숍 (bi syob)
Latin A signifer / cursor / stultus / alphinus standard-bearer / messenger / fool[31]
Latvian L laidnis
Lithuanian R rikis Lithuanian military commander
Lojban X xanto elephant
Luxembourgish L Leefer runner
Macedonian L ловец hunter
Malayalam B ആന (aana) elephant
Marathi O उंट (Unṭ) camel
Mongolian Т тэмээ (temee) camel
Norwegian Bokmål L løper runner
Norwegian Nynorsk L løpar runner
Odia B ହାତୀ (hati) elephant
Oromo
Persian ف فیل elephant
Polish G goniec / laufer courier / (ger. derived)
Portuguese B bispo bishop
Romanian N nebun fool
Russian С слон (slon) elephant
Scottish Gaelic E easbaig bishop
Serbo-Croatian L lovac / strijelac / laufer (Л ловац / стрелац / лауфер) hunter / archer / runner
Northern Sotho Mp Mopišopo
Sicilian A alferu
Slovak S strelec shooter
Slovene L lovec hunter
Spanish A alfil
Swedish L löpare runner
Tamil B அமைச்சர் / மந்திரி (amaicchar / manthiri) minister
Telugu శకటు (śakaţu)
Thai โคน (khōn)
Turkish F fil elephant
Ukrainian C слон (slon) elephant
Urdu فيلہ (fiyalah)
Vietnamese T tượng elephant
Welsh E esgob bishop

Unicode

Unicode defines two codepoints for bishop:

U+2657 White Chess Bishop (HTML ♗)

U+265D Black Chess Bishop (HTML ♝)

See also

Notes

  1. ^ a b "The value of the chess pieces". Schach.de. Retrieved 2021-03-11.
  2. ^ (Mednis 1990:2)
  3. ^ Discussions on the strength of bishops is covered e.g. in "The Art of Planning, part 2" by Jeremy Silman published in the July 1990 issue of Chess Life. Suba's quote is mentioned e.g. in Secrets of Modern Chess Strategy, Advances Since Nimzowitsch by John Watson.
  4. ^ "Krasenkow vs. Zvjaginsev". Chessgames.com.
  5. ^ "Anatoly Karpov vs. Walter Shawn Browne, 1972". Chessgames.com.
  6. ^ (Mednis 1990:133–34)
  7. ^ (Müller & Lamprecht 2001:118)
  8. ^ (Fine & Benko 2003:184–204)
  9. ^ (Reinfeld 1947:80–81)
  10. ^ "Efim Bogoljubov vs. Max Bluemich, 1925". Chessgames.com.
  11. ^ Murray 1913, p. 483
  12. ^ Murray 1913, p. 348
  13. ^ Murray 1913, p. 344
  14. ^ The Spanish alfil is simply a loanword of the Persian term, without any other meaning; while the Italian form became alfiere—an already existing Germanic- or Arabian-derived word for "standard-bearer".
  15. ^ Yalom, Marilyn. Birth of the Chess Queen. New York: Perennial, 2004. p. 70.
  16. ^ a b Piececlopedia: Bishop 2010-02-05 at the Wayback Machine from Online Etymology Dictionary
  17. ^ Archaeologia, Or, Miscellaneous Tracts Relating to Antiquity, Volume 11 [1] 2022-11-01 at the Wayback Machine
  18. ^ Murray, H. J. R. (1913). A History of Chess, Oxford University Press. p. 507[2], p. 521[3] pp. 530–533[4].
  19. ^ Piececlopedia: Bishop 2010-06-12 at the Wayback Machine from chessvariants.org
  20. ^ Reopening History of Storied Norse Chessmen 2017-12-08 at the Wayback Machine from nytimes.com
  21. ^ Fiske 1905
  22. ^ The Oxford Companion to Chess
  23. ^ The Everything Chess Basic Book, by the US Chess Federation and Peter Kurzdorfer, 2003, pp. 32–33.
  24. ^ Golombek, 1976, p. 80
  25. ^ Davidson, pp. 35–36
  26. ^ The word can also mean madman or gannet.
  27. ^ Davidson, p. 35
  28. ^ [5] 2022-06-01 at the Wayback Machine Tezaurs - Latvian Definition Dictionary
  29. ^ The Estonian chess terms were coined by Ado Grenzstein.
  30. ^ "Handbook". www.fide.com. Retrieved 22 March 2019. The pieces bear the names: Koenig, Dame, Turm, Laeufer, Springer, Bauer
  31. ^ H. J. R. Murray, A History of Chess, ch. 11

References

External links

bishop, chess, bishop, piece, game, chess, moves, captures, along, diagonals, without, jumping, over, intervening, pieces, each, player, begins, game, with, bishops, starting, squares, white, bishops, black, bishops, white, bishopblack, bishop, contents, place. The bishop is a piece in the game of chess It moves and captures along diagonals without jumping over intervening pieces Each player begins the game with two bishops The starting squares are c1 and f1 for White s bishops and c8 and f8 for Black s bishops White bishopBlack bishop Contents 1 Placement and movement 2 Comparison other pieces 2 1 Versus rook 2 2 Versus knight 3 Game use 3 1 Good bishop and bad bishop 3 2 Fianchetto 3 3 Endgame 3 3 1 Bishops on opposite colors 3 3 2 Wrong bishop 4 History 4 1 Name translations 5 Unicode 6 See also 7 Notes 8 References 9 External linksThis article uses algebraic notation to describe chess moves Placement and movement EditThe king s bishop is placed on f1 for White and f8 for Black the queen s bishop is placed on c1 for White and c8 for Black The bishop has no restrictions in distance for each move but is limited to diagonal movement It cannot jump over other pieces A bishop captures by occupying the square on which an enemy piece stands As a consequence of its diagonal movement each bishop always remains on one square color Due to this it is common to refer to a bishop as a light squared or dark squared bishop abcdefgh8 877665544332211abcdefghInitial placement of the bishops abcdefgh8 877665544332211abcdefghThe black bishop can move to any of the squares marked by a black dot The white bishop can move to any square marked by a white dot or capture the black pawn Comparison other pieces EditVersus rook Edit See also Chess piece relative value and The exchange chess A rook is generally worth about two pawns more than a bishop The bishop has access to only half of the squares on the board whereas all squares of the board are accessible to the rook On an empty board a rook attacks fourteen squares regardless of position whereas a bishop attacks no more than thirteen from one of four center squares and sometimes as few as seven from sides and corners A king and rook can force checkmate against a lone king whereas a king and bishop cannot 1 A king and two bishops on opposite colored squares however can force mate Versus knight Edit Knights and bishops are each worth about three pawns This means bishops are approximately equal in strength to knights but depending on the game situation either may have a distinct advantage Less experienced players tend to underrate the bishop compared to the knight because the knight can reach all squares and is more adept at forking More experienced players understand the power of the bishop 2 Bishops usually gain in relative strength towards the endgame as more pieces are captured and more open lines become available on which they can operate A bishop can easily influence both wings simultaneously whereas a knight is less capable of doing so In an open endgame a pair of bishops is decidedly superior to either a bishop and a knight or two knights A player possessing a pair of bishops has a strategic weapon in the form of a long term threat to trade down to an advantageous endgame 1 Two bishops on opposite colored squares and king can force checkmate against a lone king whereas two knights cannot A bishop and knight can force mate but with far greater difficulty than two bishops In certain positions a bishop can by itself lose a move see triangulation and tempo while a knight can never do so The bishop is capable of skewering or pinning a piece while the knight can do neither A bishop can in some situations hinder a knight from moving In these situations the bishop is said to be dominating the knight On the other hand in the opening and middlegame a bishop may be hemmed in by pawns of both players and thus be inferior to a knight which can jump over them A knight check cannot be blocked but a bishop check can Furthermore on a crowded board a knight has many tactical opportunities to fork two enemy pieces A bishop can fork but opportunities are more rare One such example occurs in the position illustrated which arises from the Ruy Lopez 1 e4 e5 2 Nf3 Nc6 3 Bb5 a6 4 Ba4 Nf6 5 0 0 b5 6 Bb3 Be7 7 d4 d6 8 c3 Bg4 9 h3 Bxf3 10 Qxf3 exd4 11 Qg3 g6 12 Bh6 Bishop dominating a knightabcdefgh8 877665544332211abcdefghThe knight cannot move to any of its four legal squares without being captured by the white bishop Example of bishop forkabcdefgh8 877665544332211abcdefghAfter 12 Nxe4 the forking 13 Bd5 wins material after e g 13 Nxg3 14 Bxc6 Qd7 15 Bxd7 Kxd7 16 fxg3 Game use EditGood bishop and bad bishop Edit Krasenkow vs ZvjaginsevFIDE World Chess Championship 2004abcdefgh8 877665544332211abcdefghPosition after 23 Rxa1 In the middlegame a player with only one bishop should generally place friendly pawns on squares of the color that the bishop cannot move to This allows the player to control squares of both colors allows the bishop to move freely among the pawns and helps fix enemy pawns on squares on which they can be attacked by the bishop Such a bishop is often referred to as a good bishop Conversely a bishop which is impeded by friendly pawns is often referred to as a bad bishop or sometimes disparagingly a tall pawn The black light squared bishop in the French Defense is a notorious example of this concept A bad bishop however need not always be a weakness especially if it is outside its own pawn chains In addition having a bad bishop may be advantageous in an opposite colored bishops endgame Even if the bad bishop is passively placed it may serve a useful defensive function a well known quip from GM Mihai Suba is that Bad bishops protect good pawns 3 In the position from the game Krasenkow versus Zvjaginsev 4 a thicket of black pawns hems in Black s bishop on c8 so Black is effectively playing with one piece fewer than White Although the black pawns also obstruct the white bishop on e2 it has many more attacking possibilities and thus is a good bishop vis a vis Black s bad bishop Black resigned after another ten moves Fianchetto Edit Main article Fianchetto A bishop may be fianchettoed for example after moving the g2 pawn to g3 and the bishop on f1 to g2 This can form a strong defense for the castled king on g1 and the bishop can often exert strong pressure on the long diagonal here h1 a8 A fianchettoed bishop should generally not be given up lightly since the resulting holes in the pawn formation may prove to be serious weaknesses particularly if the king has castled on that side of the board There are nonetheless some modern opening lines where a fianchettoed bishop is given up for a knight in order to double the opponent s pawns for example 1 d4 g6 2 c4 Bg7 3 Nc3 c5 4 d5 Bxc3 5 bxc3 f5 a sharp line originated by Roman Dzindzichashvili Giving up a fianchettoed queen s bishop for a knight is usually less problematic For example in Karpov Browne San Antonio 1972 after 1 c4 c5 2 b3 Nf6 3 Bb2 g6 Karpov gave up his fianchettoed bishop with 4 Bxf6 exf6 5 Nc3 doubling Black s pawns and giving him a hole on d5 5 Endgame Edit An endgame in which each player has only one bishop one controlling the dark squares and the other the light will often result in a draw even if one player has a pawn or sometimes two more than the other The players tend to gain control of squares of opposite colors and a deadlock results In endgames with same colored bishops however even a positional advantage may be enough to win 6 Bishops on opposite colors Edit Main article Opposite colored bishops endgame Endgames in which each player has only one bishop and no other pieces besides the king and the bishops are on opposite colors are often drawn even when one side has an extra pawn or two Many of these positions would be a win if the bishops were on the same color H Wolf vs P Leonhardt 1905abcdefgh8 877665544332211abcdefghDraw with either side to move Bogoljubov vs Blumich 1925abcdefgh8 877665544332211abcdefghPosition after 28 Kf8The position from Wolf versus Leonhardt see diagram shows an important defensive setup Black can make no progress since the white bishop ties the black king to defending the pawn on g4 and it also prevents the advance f3 because it would simply capture the pawn then either the other pawn is exchanged for the bishop an immediate draw or the pawn advances an easily drawn position Otherwise the bishop alternates between the squares d1 and e2 7 If two pawns are connected they normally win if they reach their sixth rank otherwise the game may be a draw as above If two pawns are separated by one file they usually draw but win if they are farther apart 8 In some cases with more pawns on the board it is actually advantageous to have the bishops on opposite colors if one side has weak pawns In the 1925 game Efim Bogoljubov Max Blumich see diagram White wins because of the bishops being on opposite colors making Black weak on the black squares the weakness of Black s isolated pawns on the queenside and the weak doubled pawns on the kingside 9 The game continued 10 29 Kd2 Ke7 30 Kc3 f6 31 Kd4 Be6 32 Kc5 Kd7 33 Kb6 g5 34 Kxa6 Kc7 35 Bb6 Kc8 36 Bc5 Kc7 37 Bf8 f5 38 Bxg7 f4 39 Bf6 f3 40 gxf3 exf3 41 Bxg5 Bxh3 42 Bf4 1 0Wrong bishop Edit Main articles Wrong bishop and Wrong rook pawn In an endgame with a bishop in some cases the bishop is the wrong bishop meaning that it is on the wrong color of square for some purpose usually promoting a pawn For example with just a bishop and a rook pawn if the bishop cannot control the promotion square of the pawn it is said to be the wrong bishop or the pawn is said to be the wrong rook pawn This results in some positions being drawn by setting up a fortress which otherwise would be won History Edit Antique Indian chess bishop represented by the camel carved from sandalwood Elephant chess piece from the Charlemagne chessmen 11th century A pre Staunton bishop Camel chess pieces from a Mongolian set The bishops in the Lewis chessmen A white bishop The bishop s predecessor in medieval chess shatranj originally chaturanga was the alfil meaning elephant which could leap two squares along any diagonal and could jump over an intervening piece As a consequence each fil was restricted to eight squares and no fil could attack another The modern bishop first appeared shortly after 1200 in Courier chess 11 A piece with this move called a cocatriz or crocodile is part of the Grande Acedrex in the Libro de los juegos compiled in 1283 for King Alfonso X of Castile The game is attributed to India then a very vague term 12 About half a century later Muḥammad ibn Maḥmud al Amuli in his Treasury of the Sciences describes an expanded form of chess with two pieces moving like the rook but obliquely 13 The bishop was also independently invented in Japan at about the same time the 13th century where it formed part of sho shogi and dai shogi it remains present in modern shogi as the direct descendant of sho shogi Derivatives of alfil survive in the languages of the two countries where chess was first introduced within Western Europe Italian alfiere and Spanish alfil 14 It was known as the aufin in French 15 or the aufin alphin or archer in early English 16 The earliest references to bishops on the chessboard are two 13th century Latin texts De Vetula and Quaedam moralitas de scaccario 17 18 The etymology of bishop comes from Old English bisceop bishop high priest from Late Latin episcopus from Greek episkopos watcher overseer The term bishop as applied specifically to the chess piece was first recorded in the 16th century with the first known written example dating back to the 1560s 16 In all other Germanic languages except for Icelandic it is called various names all of which directly translate to English as runner or messenger In Icelandic however it is called biskup 19 with the same meaning as in English The use of the term in Icelandic predates that of the English language as the first mentioning of biskup in Icelandic texts dates back to the early part of the 14th century while the 12th century Lewis Chessmen portray the bishop as an unambiguously ecclesiastical figure In the Saga of Earl Magus which was written in Iceland somewhere between 1300 1325 it is described how an emperor was checkmated by a bishop This has led to some speculations as to the origin of the English use of the term bishop 20 21 citation needed The canonical chessmen date back to the Staunton chess set of 1849 The piece s deep groove symbolizes a bishop s or abbot s mitre Some have written that the groove originated from the original form of the piece an elephant 22 23 with the groove representing the elephant s tusks 24 The English apparently chose to call the piece a bishop because the projections at the top resembled a mitre 25 This groove was interpreted differently in different countries as the game moved to Europe in France for example the groove was taken to be a jester s cap hence in France the bishop is called fou the jester 26 and in Romania the nebun madman 27 In some Slavic languages e g Czech Slovak the bishop is called strelec strelec which directly translates to English as a shooter meaning an archer while in others it is still known as elephant e g Russian slon In South Slavic languages it is usually known as lovac meaning hunter or laufer taken from the German name for the same piece laufer is also a co official Polish name for the piece alongside goniec An alternative name for bishop in Russian is officer Russian oficer it is also called a3iwmatikos axiomatikos in Greek aficer afitser in Belarusian and oficeri in Albanian In Mongolian and several Indian languages it is called the camel In Lithuanian it is the rikis a kind of military commander in medieval Lithuania In Latvia it is known as laidnis a term for the wooden handle part of some firearms 28 Name translations Edit Overview of chess piece names Language Bishop TranslationAfrikaans L Loper runnerAlbanian F Fili Oficeri elephant officerArabic ف فيل fil elephantAzerbaijani F Fil elephantArmenian Փ Փիղ P il elephantBasque A AlfilaBelarusian Taraskievica A aficer officerBengali H গজ হ ত goj hati ElephantBulgarian O oficer officerCatalan A alfilChinese B 象 xiang elephantCzech S strelec shooterDanish L lober runnerDutch L loper raadsheer runner counsellorEnglish B bishopEsperanto K kuriero courierEstonian 29 O oda spearFinnish L lahetti messengerFrench F fou jesterGalician B bispo bishopGeorgian კ კუ ku tortoiseGerman 30 L Laufer runnerGreek A a3iwmatikos axiomatikos officerHindi O ऊ ट uṁṭ camelHebrew ר רץ Ratz runnerHausa G giwa elephantHungarian F futo runnerIcelandic B biskup bishopIdo E episkopo bishopIndonesian G gajah elephantInterslavic L lovec hunterIrish E easpag bishopItalian A alfiere standard bearerJapanese B ビショップ bishoppu Javanese M mentri ministerKannada ರ ರಥ ratha chariotKazakh P pil pil elephantKorean B 비숍 bi syob Latin A signifer cursor stultus alphinus standard bearer messenger fool 31 Latvian L laidnisLithuanian R rikis Lithuanian military commanderLojban X xanto elephantLuxembourgish L Leefer runnerMacedonian L lovec hunterMalayalam B ആന aana elephantMarathi O उ ट Unṭ camelMongolian T temee temee camelNorwegian Bokmal L loper runnerNorwegian Nynorsk L lopar runnerOdia B ହ ତ hati elephantOromoPersian ف فیل elephantPolish G goniec laufer courier ger derived Portuguese B bispo bishopRomanian N nebun foolRussian S slon slon elephantScottish Gaelic E easbaig bishopSerbo Croatian L lovac strijelac laufer L lovac strelac laufer hunter archer runnerNorthern Sotho Mp MopisopoSicilian A alferuSlovak S strelec shooterSlovene L lovec hunterSpanish A alfilSwedish L lopare runnerTamil B அம ச சர மந த ர amaicchar manthiri ministerTelugu శకట sakaţu Thai kh okhn khōn Turkish F fil elephantUkrainian C slon slon elephantUrdu فيلہ fiyalah Vietnamese T tượng elephantWelsh E esgob bishopUnicode EditMain article Chess symbols in Unicode Unicode defines two codepoints for bishop U 2657 White Chess Bishop HTML amp 9815 U 265D Black Chess Bishop HTML amp 9821 See also EditBishop and knight checkmate Chess endgame Chess piece Chess piece relative value the Exchange a bishop or knight for a rook Opposite colored bishops endgame Rules of chess Staunton chess set Wrong bishop a bishop may be on the wrong color Wrong rook pawnNotes Edit a b The value of the chess pieces Schach de Retrieved 2021 03 11 Mednis 1990 2 Discussions on the strength of bishops is covered e g in The Art of Planning part 2 by Jeremy Silman published in the July 1990 issue of Chess Life Suba s quote is mentioned e g in Secrets of Modern Chess Strategy Advances Since Nimzowitsch by John Watson Krasenkow vs Zvjaginsev Chessgames com Anatoly Karpov vs Walter Shawn Browne 1972 Chessgames com Mednis 1990 133 34 Muller amp Lamprecht 2001 118 Fine amp Benko 2003 184 204 Reinfeld 1947 80 81 Efim Bogoljubov vs Max Bluemich 1925 Chessgames com Murray 1913 p 483 Murray 1913 p 348 Murray 1913 p 344 The Spanish alfil is simply a loanword of the Persian term without any other meaning while the Italian form became alfiere an already existing Germanic or Arabian derived word for standard bearer Yalom Marilyn Birth of the Chess Queen New York Perennial 2004 p 70 a b Piececlopedia Bishop Archived 2010 02 05 at the Wayback Machine from Online Etymology Dictionary Archaeologia Or Miscellaneous Tracts Relating to Antiquity Volume 11 1 Archived 2022 11 01 at the Wayback Machine Murray H J R 1913 A History of Chess Oxford University Press p 507 2 p 521 3 pp 530 533 4 Piececlopedia Bishop Archived 2010 06 12 at the Wayback Machine from chessvariants org Reopening History of Storied Norse Chessmen Archived 2017 12 08 at the Wayback Machine from nytimes com Fiske 1905 The Oxford Companion to Chess The Everything Chess Basic Book by the US Chess Federation and Peter Kurzdorfer 2003 pp 32 33 Golombek 1976 p 80 Davidson pp 35 36 The word can also mean madman or gannet Davidson p 35 5 Archived 2022 06 01 at the Wayback Machine Tezaurs Latvian Definition Dictionary The Estonian chess terms were coined by Ado Grenzstein Handbook www fide com Retrieved 22 March 2019 The pieces bear the names Koenig Dame Turm Laeufer Springer Bauer H J R Murray A History of Chess ch 11References EditBarden Leonard 1980 Play better chess with Leonard Barden Octopus Books Limited p 10 ISBN 978 0 7134 8769 5 Brace Edward R 1977 An Illustrated Dictionary of Chess Hamlyn Publishing Group pp 34 35 ISBN 1 55521 394 4 Davidson Henry 1981 A Short History of Chess 1949 McKay ISBN 0 679 14550 8 Fine Reuben Benko Pal 2003 Basic Chess Endings 1941 McKay ISBN 0 8129 3493 8 Fiske Willard 1905 Chess in Iceland and in Icelandic literature with historical notes on other table games 1905 The Florentine typographical society Golombek Harry 1976 Chess A History Putnam ISBN 0 399 11575 7 Hooper David Whyld Kenneth 1996 First pub 1992 bishop The Oxford Companion to Chess 2nd ed Oxford University Press p 41 ISBN 0 19 280049 3 Kurzdorfer Peter 2003 The Everything Chess Basics Book Adams Media ISBN 978 1 58062 586 9 Mednis Edmar 1990 Practical Bishop Endings Chess Enterprises ISBN 0 945470 04 5 Muller Karsten Lamprecht Frank 2001 Fundamental Chess Endings Gambit Publications ISBN 1 901983 53 6 Murray H J R 1913 A History of Chess Oxford University Press Reinfeld Fred 1947 Reinfeld on the End game in Chess Dover PublicationsExternal links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Chess bishops Piececlopedia Bishop by Fergus Duniho and Hans Bodlaender The Chess Variant Pages Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Bishop chess amp oldid 1151794406, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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