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Queen (chess)

The queen (♕, ♛) is the most powerful piece in the game of chess. It can move any number of squares vertically, horizontally or diagonally, combining the powers of the rook and bishop. Each player starts the game with one queen, placed in the middle of the first rank next to the king. Because the queen is the strongest piece, a pawn is promoted to a queen in the vast majority of cases.

White queen
Black queen

The predecessor to the queen is the ferz, a weak piece only able to move or capture one step diagonally, originating from the Persian game of shatranj. The modern queen gained its power and its modern move in Spain in the 15th century during Isabella I's reign, perhaps inspired by her great political power.

Placement and movement edit

The white queen starts on d1, while the black queen starts on d8. With the chessboard oriented correctly, the white queen starts on a white square and the black queen starts on a black square—thus the mnemonics "queen gets her color", "queen on [her] [own] color", or "the dress [queen piece] matches the shoes [square]" (Latin: servat rēgīna colōrem).

The queen can be moved any number of unoccupied squares in a straight line vertically, horizontally, or diagonally, thus combining the moves of the rook and bishop. The queen captures by moving to the square on which an enemy piece stands.

Although both players start with one queen each, a pawn can be promoted to any of several types of pieces, including a queen, when the pawn is moved to the player's furthest rank (the opponent's first rank). Such a queen created by promotion can be an additional queen or, if the player's queen has been captured, a replacement queen. The queen is by far the most common piece type a pawn is promoted to due to the relative power of a queen; promotion to a queen is colloquially called queening.

Piece value edit

The queen is typically worth about nine pawns, which is slightly stronger than a rook and a bishop together, but slightly weaker than two rooks, though there are exceptions. It is almost always disadvantageous to exchange the queen for a single piece other than the enemy's queen.

The reason that the queen is stronger than a combination of a rook and bishop, even though they control the same number of squares, is twofold. First, the queen is more mobile than the rook and the bishop, as the entire power of the queen can be transferred to another location in one move, while transferring the entire firepower of a rook and bishop requires two moves, the bishop always being restricted to squares of one color. Second, unlike the bishop, the queen is not hampered by an inability to control squares of the opposite color to the square on which it stands. A factor in favor of the rook and bishop is that they can attack (or defend) a square twice, while a queen can only do so once. However, experience has shown that this factor is usually less significant than the points favoring the queen.[1]

The queen is strongest when the board is open, the enemy king is poorly defended, or there are loose (i.e. undefended) pieces in the enemy camp. Because of its long range and ability to move in multiple directions, the queen is well-equipped to execute forks. Compared to other long range pieces (i.e. rooks and bishops), the queen is less restricted and stronger in closed positions.

Strategy edit

A player should generally delay developing the queen, as developing it too quickly can expose it to attacks by enemy pieces, causing the player to lose time removing the queen from danger. Despite this, beginners often develop the queen early in the game, hoping to plunder the enemy position and deliver an early checkmate, such as the scholar's mate.

Early queen attacks are rare in high-level chess, but there are some openings with early queen development that are used by high-level players. For example, the Scandinavian Defense (1.e4 d5), which often features queen moves by Black on the second and third moves, is considered sound and has been played at the world championship level. Some less common examples have also been observed in high-level games. The Danvers Opening (1.e4 e5 2.Qh5), which is widely characterized as a beginner's opening, has occasionally been played by the American grandmaster Hikaru Nakamura.[2]

A queen exchange often marks the beginning of the endgame, but there are queen endgames, and sometimes queens are exchanged in the opening, long before the endgame. A common goal in the endgame is to promote a pawn to a queen. As the queen has the largest range and mobility, queen and king vs. lone king is an easy win when compared to some other basic mates. Queen and king vs. rook and king is also a win for the player with the queen, but it is not easy.

Queen sacrifice edit

A queen sacrifice is the deliberate sacrifice of a queen in order to gain a more favorable tactical position. One of the most widely known examples of this was in the game Anderssen–Kieseritzky, 1851, where Anderssen sacrificed a queen (along with three other pieces) to reach checkmate.

History edit

 
Vizier piece from a Southern Italian chess set, 12th century

The queen was originally the counsellor or prime minister or vizier (Sanskrit mantri, Persian farzīn, Arabic firzān, firz or wazīr). Initially, its only move was one square diagonally. Around 1300, its abilities were enhanced to allow it to jump two squares diagonally (onto a same-colored square) for its first move.

The fers changed into the queen over time. The first surviving mention of this piece as a queen or similar is the Latin regina in the Einsiedeln Poem, a 98-line Medieval Latin poem written around 997 and preserved in a monastery at Einsiedeln in Switzerland. Some surviving early medieval pieces depict the piece as a queen. The word fers became grammatically feminized in several languages, such as alferza in Spanish and fierce or fierge in French.[3] The Carmina Burana also refer to the queen as femina (woman) and coniunx (spouse),[4] and the name Amazon has sometimes been seen.[5]

During the great chess reform at the end of the 15th century, Catholic nations kept using an equivalent of Latin domina ("lady"), such as dama in Spanish, donna in Italy, and dame in France, all of which evoke "Our Lady". However, Protestant nations such as Germany and England refused any derivatives of domina as it might have suggested some cult of the Virgin Mary and instead opted for secular terms such as Königin in German and "queen" in English.[6]

In Russian, the piece keeps its Persian name of ferz; koroleva (queen) is colloquial and is never used by professional chess players. However, the names korolevna (king's daughter), tsaritsa (tsar's wife), and baba (old woman) are attested as early as 1694.[7] In Arabic countries, the queen remains termed and, in some cases, depicted as a vizier.[8]

Historian Marilyn Yalom proposes several factors that might have been partly responsible for influencing the piece towards its identity as a queen and its power in modern chess: the prominence of medieval queens such as Eleanor of Aquitaine, Blanche of Castile, and more particularly Isabella I of Castile; the cult of the Virgin Mary;[4] the power ascribed to women in the troubadour tradition of courtly love; and the medieval popularity of chess as a game particularly suitable for women to play on equal terms with men.[9] She points to medieval poetry depicting the Virgin as the chess-queen of God or Fierce Dieu.[10]

Significantly, the earliest surviving treatise to describe the modern movement of the queen (as well as the bishop and pawn), Repetición de amores e arte de axedres con CL iuegos de partido (Discourses on Love and the Art of Chess with 150 Problems) by Luis Ramírez de Lucena, was published during the reign of Isabella I of Castile.[11] Even before that, the Valencian poem Scachs d'amor ("Chess of Love") depicted a chess game between Francesc de Castellví and Narcís de Vinyoles[12] and commented on by Bernat Fenollar, which clearly had the modern moves of the queen and the bishop. Well before the queen's powers expanded, it was already being romantically described as essential to the king's survival, so that when the queen was lost, there was nothing more of value on the board.[13]

 
Queen from Spain, 12th century (walrus tusk)

Marilyn Yalom wrote that:

  • The chess queen, rather than ferz or similar, is known of in what is now Spain and Portugal only from the 12th century, but started sooner elsewhere.
  • The modern move of the Queen started in Spain during Isabella I's reign, perhaps inspired by her great political power, and spread from there, perhaps being spread by the invention of printing and the 1492 Expulsion from Spain of the Jews who carried the new chess rule with them as they fled.

During the 15th century, the queen's move took its modern form as a combination of the move of the rook and the current move of the bishop.[14] Starting from Spain, this new version – called "queen's chess" (in Italian, scacchi della donna) or, pejoratively, "madwoman's chess" (scacchi alla rabiosa) – spread throughout Europe rapidly, partly due to the advent of the printing press and the popularity of new books on chess.[15] The new rules faced a backlash in some quarters, ranging from anxiety over a powerful female warrior figure to frank abuse against women in general.[16]

At various times, the ability of pawns to be queened was restricted while the original queen was still on the board, so as not to cause scandal by providing the king with more than one queen. An early 12th-century Latin poem refers to a queened pawn as a ferzia, as opposed to the original queen or regina, to account for this.[17]

When the queen was attacked, it was customary to warn the opponent by announcing "gardez la reine" or simply "gardez", similar to the announcement of "check". Some published rules even required this announcement before the queen could be legally captured. This custom was largely abandoned in the 19th century.[18]

In Russia, for a long time, the queen could also move like a knight; some players disapproved of this ability to "gallop like the horse" (knight).[19][20] The book A History of Chess by H.J.R. Murray,[21] says that William Coxe, who was in Russia in 1772, saw chess played with the queen also moving like a knight. Such an augmented queen piece is now known as the fairy chess piece amazon.

Around 1230, the queen was also independently invented as a piece in Japan, where it formed part of the game of dai shogi. The piece was retained in the smaller and more popular chu shogi, but does not form a part of modern shogi.

Nomenclature edit

In most languages the piece is known as "queen" or "lady" (e.g. Italian regina or Spanish dama). Asian and Eastern European languages tend to refer to it as vizier, minister or advisor (e.g. Arabic/Persian وزیر wazir (vazir), Russian/Persian ферзь/فرز ferz). In Polish it is known as the hetman, the name of a major historical military-political office, while in Estonian it is called lipp ("flag", "standard").


Overview of chess piece names
Language

Queen Translation
Afrikaans D Dame lady
Albanian D Dama / Mbretëresha lady / queen
Arabic و وزير (wazïr) vizier
Azerbaijani V Vəzir vizier
Armenian Թ Թագուհի (T῾agowhi) queen
Basque D Dama lady
Belarusian (Taraškievica) Вз візыр vizier
Bengali M মন্ত্রী (montri) Minister
Bulgarian Д царица / дама empress / lady
Catalan D dama / reina lady / queen
Chinese Q (hòu) queen
Czech D dáma lady
Danish D dronning queen
Dutch D dame / koningin lady / queen
English Q queen
Esperanto D damo lady
Estonian[22] L lipp flag
Finnish D daami / kuningatar lady / queen
French D dame lady
Galician D dama / raíña lady / queen
Georgian ლაზიერი (lazieri) queen
German[23] D Dame lady / queen
Greek Β βασίλισσα (vasílissa) queen
Hindi V वज़ीर / रानी (vazīr / rānī) vizier / queen
Hebrew מה מלכה (Malka) queen
Hausa Q sarauniya queen
Hungarian V vezér / királynő leader / queen
Icelandic D drottning queen
Ido D damo lady
Indonesian M menteri minister / vizier
Interslavic C carica / dama empress / lady
Irish B banríon queen
Italian D donna / regina lady / queen
Japanese Q クイーン (kuīn)
Javanese Q ratu / perdhana mentri queen / prime minister
Kannada ಮಂತ್ರಿ (mantri) minister
Kazakh У уәзір (wazir) vizier
Korean Q 퀸 (kwin)
Latin M regina queen
Latvian D dāma lady
Lithuanian V valdovė queen
Lojban Ni noltruni'u queen
Luxembourgish D Damm lady
Macedonian D кралица / дама queen / lady
Malayalam Q മന്ത്രി (manthri) minister
Marathi V वजीर (vajīr) vizier
Mongolian Б бэрс (fers) vizier
Norwegian Bokmål D dronning queen
Norwegian Nynorsk D dronning queen
Odia Q ରାଣୀ (raṇi) queen
Oromo
Persian و وزیر vizier / minister
Polish H królowa / hetman queen / general (hist.)
Portuguese D dama / rainha lady / queen
Romanian D damă / regină lady / queen
Russian Ф ферзь / королева (ferz' / koroleva) vizier / queen
Scottish Gaelic B bànrigh queen
Serbo-Croatian D kraljica / dama (Д краљицa / дама) queen / lady
Northern Sotho Kg Kgošigadi
Sicilian D riggina queen
Slovak D dáma lady
Slovene D dama lady
Spanish D dama / reina lady / queen
Swedish D dam / drottning lady / queen
Tamil Q அரசி (araci) queen
Telugu మంత్రి (maṃtri) minister
Thai เม็ด / ตรี / มนตรี (met / tri / montri) counselor
Turkish V vezir vizier
Ukrainian Ф ферзь (ferz) vizier
Urdu وزیر (vazīr)
Vietnamese H hậu queen
Welsh B brenhines queen

Unicode edit

Unicode defines two codepoints for queen:

U+2655 White Chess Queen (HTML ♕)

U+265B Black Chess Queen (HTML ♛)

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ Larsen, Bent (1975), Lærebok i sjakk
  2. ^ "Nakamura's 2.Qh5". ChessNinja.com. 22 April 2005. Retrieved 12 April 2011.
  3. ^ (Yalom 2004:95)
  4. ^ a b (Yalom 2004:77)
  5. ^ (Yalom 2004:218)
  6. ^ (Yalom 2004:106)
  7. ^ (Yalom 2004:175)
  8. ^ (Yalom 2004:238)
  9. ^ (Yalom 2004:passim)
  10. ^ (Yalom 2004:112–114)
  11. ^ (Yalom 2004:195)
  12. ^ "Francesco di Castellvi vs. Narciso Vinyoles, Valencia 1475". Chessgames.com.
  13. ^ (Yalom 2004:192)
  14. ^ (Davidson 1981:13–14, 28–30)
  15. ^ (Yalom 2004:214–216)
  16. ^ (Yalom 2004:214–219)
  17. ^ (Yalom 2004:91)
  18. ^ Hooper & Whyld (1996), p. 74
  19. ^ . Archived from the original on 11 January 2012. Retrieved 7 July 2013. (in Russian)
  20. ^ [1] 20 September 2013 at the Wayback Machine (in Russian)
  21. ^ p. 384
  22. ^ The Estonian chess terms were coined by Ado Grenzstein.
  23. ^ "Handbook". www.fide.com. Retrieved 22 March 2019. The pieces bear the names: Koenig, Dame, Turm, Laeufer, Springer, Bauer

References edit

External links edit

queen, chess, queen, most, powerful, piece, game, chess, move, number, squares, vertically, horizontally, diagonally, combining, powers, rook, bishop, each, player, starts, game, with, queen, placed, middle, first, rank, next, king, because, queen, strongest, . The queen is the most powerful piece in the game of chess It can move any number of squares vertically horizontally or diagonally combining the powers of the rook and bishop Each player starts the game with one queen placed in the middle of the first rank next to the king Because the queen is the strongest piece a pawn is promoted to a queen in the vast majority of cases White queenBlack queen The predecessor to the queen is the ferz a weak piece only able to move or capture one step diagonally originating from the Persian game of shatranj The modern queen gained its power and its modern move in Spain in the 15th century during Isabella I s reign perhaps inspired by her great political power Contents 1 Placement and movement 2 Piece value 3 Strategy 4 Queen sacrifice 5 History 5 1 Nomenclature 6 Unicode 7 See also 8 Notes 9 References 10 External linksThis article uses algebraic notation to describe chess moves Placement and movement editThe white queen starts on d1 while the black queen starts on d8 With the chessboard oriented correctly the white queen starts on a white square and the black queen starts on a black square thus the mnemonics queen gets her color queen on her own color or the dress queen piece matches the shoes square Latin servat regina colōrem The queen can be moved any number of unoccupied squares in a straight line vertically horizontally or diagonally thus combining the moves of the rook and bishop The queen captures by moving to the square on which an enemy piece stands abcdefgh8 nbsp nbsp nbsp 877665544332211abcdefghInitial placement of the queens d1 and d8 abcdefgh8 nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp 877665544332211abcdefghPossible moves of the queen Although both players start with one queen each a pawn can be promoted to any of several types of pieces including a queen when the pawn is moved to the player s furthest rank the opponent s first rank Such a queen created by promotion can be an additional queen or if the player s queen has been captured a replacement queen The queen is by far the most common piece type a pawn is promoted to due to the relative power of a queen promotion to a queen is colloquially called queening Piece value editFurther information Chess piece relative value The queen is typically worth about nine pawns which is slightly stronger than a rook and a bishop together but slightly weaker than two rooks though there are exceptions It is almost always disadvantageous to exchange the queen for a single piece other than the enemy s queen The reason that the queen is stronger than a combination of a rook and bishop even though they control the same number of squares is twofold First the queen is more mobile than the rook and the bishop as the entire power of the queen can be transferred to another location in one move while transferring the entire firepower of a rook and bishop requires two moves the bishop always being restricted to squares of one color Second unlike the bishop the queen is not hampered by an inability to control squares of the opposite color to the square on which it stands A factor in favor of the rook and bishop is that they can attack or defend a square twice while a queen can only do so once However experience has shown that this factor is usually less significant than the points favoring the queen 1 The queen is strongest when the board is open the enemy king is poorly defended or there are loose i e undefended pieces in the enemy camp Because of its long range and ability to move in multiple directions the queen is well equipped to execute forks Compared to other long range pieces i e rooks and bishops the queen is less restricted and stronger in closed positions Strategy editA player should generally delay developing the queen as developing it too quickly can expose it to attacks by enemy pieces causing the player to lose time removing the queen from danger Despite this beginners often develop the queen early in the game hoping to plunder the enemy position and deliver an early checkmate such as the scholar s mate Early queen attacks are rare in high level chess but there are some openings with early queen development that are used by high level players For example the Scandinavian Defense 1 e4 d5 which often features queen moves by Black on the second and third moves is considered sound and has been played at the world championship level Some less common examples have also been observed in high level games The Danvers Opening 1 e4 e5 2 Qh5 which is widely characterized as a beginner s opening has occasionally been played by the American grandmaster Hikaru Nakamura 2 A queen exchange often marks the beginning of the endgame but there are queen endgames and sometimes queens are exchanged in the opening long before the endgame A common goal in the endgame is to promote a pawn to a queen As the queen has the largest range and mobility queen and king vs lone king is an easy win when compared to some other basic mates Queen and king vs rook and king is also a win for the player with the queen but it is not easy Queen sacrifice editMain article Queen sacrifice A queen sacrifice is the deliberate sacrifice of a queen in order to gain a more favorable tactical position One of the most widely known examples of this was in the game Anderssen Kieseritzky 1851 where Anderssen sacrificed a queen along with three other pieces to reach checkmate History edit nbsp Vizier piece from a Southern Italian chess set 12th centuryThe queen was originally the counsellor or prime minister or vizier Sanskrit mantri Persian farzin Arabic firzan firz or wazir Initially its only move was one square diagonally Around 1300 its abilities were enhanced to allow it to jump two squares diagonally onto a same colored square for its first move The fers changed into the queen over time The first surviving mention of this piece as a queen or similar is the Latin regina in the Einsiedeln Poem a 98 line Medieval Latin poem written around 997 and preserved in a monastery at Einsiedeln in Switzerland Some surviving early medieval pieces depict the piece as a queen The word fers became grammatically feminized in several languages such as alferza in Spanish and fierce or fierge in French 3 The Carmina Burana also refer to the queen as femina woman and coniunx spouse 4 and the name Amazon has sometimes been seen 5 During the great chess reform at the end of the 15th century Catholic nations kept using an equivalent of Latin domina lady such as dama in Spanish donna in Italy and dame in France all of which evoke Our Lady However Protestant nations such as Germany and England refused any derivatives of domina as it might have suggested some cult of the Virgin Mary and instead opted for secular terms such as Konigin in German and queen in English 6 In Russian the piece keeps its Persian name of ferz koroleva queen is colloquial and is never used by professional chess players However the names korolevna king s daughter tsaritsa tsar s wife and baba old woman are attested as early as 1694 7 In Arabic countries the queen remains termed and in some cases depicted as a vizier 8 Historian Marilyn Yalom proposes several factors that might have been partly responsible for influencing the piece towards its identity as a queen and its power in modern chess the prominence of medieval queens such as Eleanor of Aquitaine Blanche of Castile and more particularly Isabella I of Castile the cult of the Virgin Mary 4 the power ascribed to women in the troubadour tradition of courtly love and the medieval popularity of chess as a game particularly suitable for women to play on equal terms with men 9 She points to medieval poetry depicting the Virgin as the chess queen of God or Fierce Dieu 10 Significantly the earliest surviving treatise to describe the modern movement of the queen as well as the bishop and pawn Repeticion de amores e arte de axedres con CL iuegos de partido Discourses on Love and the Art of Chess with 150 Problems by Luis Ramirez de Lucena was published during the reign of Isabella I of Castile 11 Even before that the Valencian poem Scachs d amor Chess of Love depicted a chess game between Francesc de Castellvi and Narcis de Vinyoles 12 and commented on by Bernat Fenollar which clearly had the modern moves of the queen and the bishop Well before the queen s powers expanded it was already being romantically described as essential to the king s survival so that when the queen was lost there was nothing more of value on the board 13 nbsp Queen from Spain 12th century walrus tusk Marilyn Yalom wrote that The chess queen rather than ferz or similar is known of in what is now Spain and Portugal only from the 12th century but started sooner elsewhere The modern move of the Queen started in Spain during Isabella I s reign perhaps inspired by her great political power and spread from there perhaps being spread by the invention of printing and the 1492 Expulsion from Spain of the Jews who carried the new chess rule with them as they fled During the 15th century the queen s move took its modern form as a combination of the move of the rook and the current move of the bishop 14 Starting from Spain this new version called queen s chess in Italian scacchi della donna or pejoratively madwoman s chess scacchi alla rabiosa spread throughout Europe rapidly partly due to the advent of the printing press and the popularity of new books on chess 15 The new rules faced a backlash in some quarters ranging from anxiety over a powerful female warrior figure to frank abuse against women in general 16 At various times the ability of pawns to be queened was restricted while the original queen was still on the board so as not to cause scandal by providing the king with more than one queen An early 12th century Latin poem refers to a queened pawn as a ferzia as opposed to the original queen or regina to account for this 17 When the queen was attacked it was customary to warn the opponent by announcing gardez la reine or simply gardez similar to the announcement of check Some published rules even required this announcement before the queen could be legally captured This custom was largely abandoned in the 19th century 18 In Russia for a long time the queen could also move like a knight some players disapproved of this ability to gallop like the horse knight 19 20 The book A History of Chess by H J R Murray 21 says that William Coxe who was in Russia in 1772 saw chess played with the queen also moving like a knight Such an augmented queen piece is now known as the fairy chess piece amazon Around 1230 the queen was also independently invented as a piece in Japan where it formed part of the game of dai shogi The piece was retained in the smaller and more popular chu shogi but does not form a part of modern shogi Nomenclature edit In most languages the piece is known as queen or lady e g Italian regina or Spanish dama Asian and Eastern European languages tend to refer to it as vizier minister or advisor e g Arabic Persian وزیر wazir vazir Russian Persian ferz فرز ferz In Polish it is known as the hetman the name of a major historical military political office while in Estonian it is called lipp flag standard Overview of chess piece names Language Queen TranslationAfrikaans D Dame ladyAlbanian D Dama Mbreteresha lady queenArabic و وزير wazir vizierAzerbaijani V Vezir vizierArmenian Թ Թագուհի T agowhi queenBasque D Dama ladyBelarusian Taraskievica Vz vizyr vizierBengali M মন ত র montri MinisterBulgarian D carica dama empress ladyCatalan D dama reina lady queenChinese Q 后 hou queenCzech D dama ladyDanish D dronning queenDutch D dame koningin lady queenEnglish Q queenEsperanto D damo ladyEstonian 22 L lipp flagFinnish D daami kuningatar lady queenFrench D dame ladyGalician D dama raina lady queenGeorgian ლ ლაზიერი lazieri queenGerman 23 D Dame lady queenGreek B basilissa vasilissa queenHindi V वज़ र र न vazir rani vizier queenHebrew מה מלכה Malka queenHausa Q sarauniya queenHungarian V vezer kiralyno leader queenIcelandic D drottning queenIdo D damo ladyIndonesian M menteri minister vizierInterslavic C carica dama empress ladyIrish B banrion queenItalian D donna regina lady queenJapanese Q クイーン kuin Javanese Q ratu perdhana mentri queen prime ministerKannada ಮ ಮ ತ ರ mantri ministerKazakh U uәzir wazir vizierKorean Q 퀸 kwin Latin M regina queenLatvian D dama ladyLithuanian V valdove queenLojban Ni noltruni u queenLuxembourgish D Damm ladyMacedonian D kralica dama queen ladyMalayalam Q മന ത ര manthri ministerMarathi V वज र vajir vizierMongolian B bers fers vizierNorwegian Bokmal D dronning queenNorwegian Nynorsk D dronning queenOdia Q ର ଣ raṇi queenOromoPersian و وزیر vizier ministerPolish H krolowa hetman queen general hist Portuguese D dama rainha lady queenRomanian D damă regină lady queenRussian F ferz koroleva ferz koroleva vizier queenScottish Gaelic B banrigh queenSerbo Croatian D kraljica dama D kraљica dama queen ladyNorthern Sotho Kg KgosigadiSicilian D riggina queenSlovak D dama ladySlovene D dama ladySpanish D dama reina lady queenSwedish D dam drottning lady queenTamil Q அரச araci queenTelugu మ త ర maṃtri ministerThai t emd tri mntri met tri montri counselorTurkish V vezir vizierUkrainian F ferz ferz vizierUrdu وزیر vazir Vietnamese H hậu queenWelsh B brenhines queenUnicode editMain article Chess symbols in Unicode Unicode defines two codepoints for queen U 2655 White Chess Queen HTML amp 9813 U 265B Black Chess Queen HTML amp 9819 See also editEight queens puzzle Queen versus pawn endgame Queen s graph Staunton chess set Empress the rook knight compound Princess the bishop knight compound Amazon the rook bishop knight compoundNotes edit Larsen Bent 1975 Laerebok i sjakk Nakamura s 2 Qh5 ChessNinja com 22 April 2005 Retrieved 12 April 2011 Yalom 2004 95 a b Yalom 2004 77 Yalom 2004 218 Yalom 2004 106 Yalom 2004 175 Yalom 2004 238 Yalom 2004 passim Yalom 2004 112 114 Yalom 2004 195 Francesco di Castellvi vs Narciso Vinyoles Valencia 1475 Chessgames com Yalom 2004 192 Davidson 1981 13 14 28 30 Yalom 2004 214 216 Yalom 2004 214 219 Yalom 2004 91 Hooper amp Whyld 1996 p 74 V Dal F FYuLA Archived from the original on 11 January 2012 Retrieved 7 July 2013 in Russian 1 Archived 20 September 2013 at the Wayback Machine in Russian p 384 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 BauerReferences editBarden Leonard 1980 Play better CHESS with Leonard Barden Octopus Books Limited p 10 ISBN 0 7064 0967 1 Brace Edward R 1977 An Illustrated Dictionary of Chess Hamlyn Publishing Group pp 230 31 ISBN 1 55521 394 4 Davidson Henry 1981 A Short History of Chess 1949 McKay ISBN 0 679 14550 8 Dickins Anthony 1971 A guide to fairy chess first ed New York Doven ISBN 0 486 22687 5 Golombek Harry 1977 Golombek s Encyclopedia of Chess Crown Publishing ISBN 0 517 53146 1 Hooper David Whyld Kenneth 1996 First pub 1992 queen The Oxford Companion to Chess 2nd ed Oxford University Press pp 328 29 ISBN 0 19 280049 3 Sunnucks Anne 1970 The Encyclopaedia of Chess second ed St Martins Press ISBN 978 0 7091 4697 1 Yalom Marilyn 2004 Birth of the Chess Queen A History 2nd ed Perennial ISBN 0 06 009065 0External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Chess queens Queen and King vs King Endgame Practice Piececlopedia Queen by Fergus Duniho and Hans Bodlaender The Chess Variant Pages Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Queen chess amp oldid 1203808158, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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