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Rook (chess)

The rook (/rʊk/; ♖, ♜) is a piece in the game of chess. It may move any number of squares horizontally or vertically without jumping, and it may capture an enemy piece on its path; additionally, it may participate in castling. Each player starts the game with two rooks, one in each corner on their own side of the board.

White rook
Black rook

Formerly, the rook (from Persian رخ rokh/rukh, meaning "chariot") was alternatively called the tower, marquess, rector, and comes (count or earl).[1] The term "castle" is considered to be informal, incorrect, or old-fashioned.[2][3]

Placement and movement

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Starting positions of the rooks
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The white rook can move to any square marked with a white dot. The black rook can move to squares with a black dot, or it can capture the white pawn on e7.

The white rooks start on the squares a1 and h1, while the black rooks start on a8 and h8. The rook moves horizontally or vertically, through any number of unoccupied squares. The rook cannot jump over pieces. The rook may capture an enemy piece by moving to the square on which the enemy piece stands, removing it from play. The rook also participates with the king in a special move called castling, wherein it is transferred to the square crossed by the king after the king is shifted two squares toward the rook.

Strategy

Relative value

The rook is worth about five pawns. In general, rooks are stronger than bishops or knights and are considered greater in value than either of those pieces by nearly two pawns, but less valuable than two minor pieces by approximately a pawn. Two rooks are generally considered to be worth slightly more than a queen (see chess piece relative value).[4] Winning a rook for a bishop or knight is referred to as winning the exchange. Rooks and queens are called major pieces or heavy pieces, as opposed to bishops and knights, the minor pieces.[5]

Development

In the opening, the rooks are blocked in by other pieces and cannot immediately participate in the game, so it is usually desirable to connect one's rooks on the first rank by castling and then clearing all pieces except the king and rooks from the first rank. In that position, the rooks support each other and can more easily move to occupy and control the most favorable files.

A common strategic goal is to develop a rook on the first rank of an open file (i.e., one unobstructed by pawns of either player) or a half-open file (i.e., one unobstructed by friendly pawns). From this position, the rook is relatively unexposed to risk but can exert control on every square on the file. If one file is particularly important, a player might advance one rook on it, then position the other rook behind—doubling the rooks.

A rook on the seventh rank (the opponent's second rank) is typically very powerful, as it threatens the opponent's unadvanced pawns and hems in the enemy king. A rook on the seventh rank is often considered sufficient compensation for a pawn.[6] In the diagrammed position from a game between Lev Polugaevsky and Larry Evans,[7] the rook on the seventh rank enables White to draw, despite being a pawn down.[8]

Two rooks on the seventh rank are often enough to force victory by the blind swine mate, or at least a draw by perpetual check.[9]

Endgame

Rooks are most powerful towards the end of a game (i.e., the endgame), when they can move unobstructed by pawns and control large numbers of squares. They are somewhat clumsy at restraining enemy pawns from advancing towards promotion unless they can occupy the file behind the advancing pawn. As well, a rook best supports a friendly pawn towards promotion from behind it on the same file (see Tarrasch rule).

In a position with a rook and one or two minor pieces versus two rooks, generally in addition to pawns, and possibly other pieces, Lev Alburt advises that the player with the single rook should avoid exchanging the rook for one of his opponent's rooks.[10]

The rook is adept at delivering checkmate. Below are a few examples of rook checkmates that are easy to force. A single rook can force checkmate while a single minor piece cannot.

History

In the medieval shatranj, the rook symbolized a chariot. The Persian word rukh means "chariot",[11] and the corresponding piece in the original Indian version, chaturanga, has the name ratha (meaning "chariot"). In modern times, it is mostly known as हाथी (elephant) to Hindi-speaking players, while East Asian chess games such as xiangqi and shogi have names also meaning chariot (車) for the same piece.[12]

 
Antique Indian Mughal chess elephant made from sandalwood representing the rook
 
19th-century illustration of a siege tower, which the rook may be intended to represent
 
The berserker used as a rook in the Lewis chessmen

Persian war chariots were heavily armored, carrying a driver and at least one ranged-weapon bearer, such as an archer. The sides of the chariot were built to resemble fortified stone work, giving the impression of small, mobile buildings, causing terror on the battlefield.[citation needed]

In Europe, the castle or tower appears for the first time in the 16th century in Vida's 1550 Ludus Scacchia, and then as a tower on the back of an elephant. In time, the elephant disappeared and only the tower was used as the piece.[13]

In the West, the rook is almost universally represented as a crenellated turret. The piece is called torre ("tower") in Italian, Portuguese, Catalan and Spanish; tour in French; toren in Dutch; Turm in German; torn in Swedish; and torni in Finnish. In Hungarian, it is bástya ("bastion") and in Hebrew ,it is called צריח (tsriʾaḥ, meaning "turret").[14] In the British Museum's collection of the medieval Lewis chess pieces, the rooks appear as stern warders, or wild-eyed berserker warriors.

Rooks are usually similar in appearance to small castles; thus, a rook is sometimes called a "castle",[15] though modern chess literature rarely, if ever, uses this term.[16]

In some languages, the rook is called a ship: Thai เรือ (reūa), Armenian Նավակ (navak), Russian ладья (ladya), Javanese ꦥꦿꦲꦸ (prahu). This may be because of the use of an Arabic style V-shaped rook piece, which some may have mistaken for a ship.[17][18][19][20] It is possible that the rendition comes from Sanskrit roka (ship); however, no chaturanga pieces were ever called a roka. Murray argued that the Javanese could not visualize a chariot moving through the jungles in sweeping fashion as the rook. The only vehicle that moved in straight fashion was ship, thus they replaced it with prahu. Murray, however, did not give an explanation of why the Russians call the piece a "ship".[20]

Peter Tyson suggests that there is a correlation between the name of the piece and the word rukh, a mythical giant bird of prey from Persian mythology.[21]

In South Slavic languages, it is called the "cannon" (Топ, Romanised top).

In Kannada, it is known as ಆನೆ (āāne), meaning "elephant".[22] This is unusual, as the term for elephant is in many other languages applied to the bishop.[23]

Name translations

Overview of chess piece names
Language

Rook Translation
Afrikaans T Toring tower
Albanian T Torra tower
Arabic ر رخ / طابية (rukhkh / ṭābiya) fortress / castle
Azerbaijani T Top cannon
Armenian Ն Նավակ (Navak) ship
Basque G Gaztelua castle
Belarusian (Taraškievica) Лд ладзьдзя boat
Bengali N নৌকা (noukā) Boat
Bulgarian Т топ cannon
Catalan T torre tower
Chinese R (jū) chariot
Czech V věž tower
Danish T tårn tower
Dutch T toren / kasteel tower / castle
English R rook, castle
Esperanto T turo tower
Estonian[24] V vanker chariot / carriage
Finnish T torni tower
French T tour tower
Galician T torre tower
Georgian ეტლი (etli) chariot
German[25] T Turm tower
Greek Π πύργος (pýrgos) tower
Hindi H हाथी (hāthī) elephant
Hebrew צ צריח (Tzariach) tower
Hausa R sansanin fortress
Hungarian B bástya bastion
Icelandic H hrókur rook
Ido T turmo tower
Indonesian B benteng castle / fortress
Interslavic Z zamok / věža castle / tower
Irish C caiseal bulwark
Italian T torre tower
Japanese R ルーク (rūku)
Javanese B bèntèng fortress
Kannada ಆನೆ (aane) elephant
Kazakh Т тура (tura) tower
Korean R 룩 (rug)
Latin T turris / elephas tower / elephant[26]
Latvian T tornis tower
Lithuanian B bokštas tower
Lojban S slanydi'u castle
Luxembourgish T Tuerm tower
Macedonian T топ cannon
Malayalam R തേര് (therú) chariot
Marathi H हत्ती (hātti) elephant
Mongolian т тэрэг (tereg) chariot
Norwegian Bokmål T tårn tower
Norwegian Nynorsk T tårn tower
Odia R ଡଙ୍ଗା (ḍôṅga) boat
Oromo
Persian ق/ر قلعه/رخ castle
Polish W wieża tower
Portuguese T torre tower
Romanian T turn / tură tower
Russian Л ладья (ladya) boat
Scottish Gaelic T tùr tower
Serbo-Croatian T top / kula (Т топ / кула) cannon / tower
Northern Sotho N Ntlosebô / Moshate
Sicilian T turru tower
Slovak V veža tower
Slovene T trdnjava castle
Spanish T torre tower
Swedish T torn tower
Tamil R கோட்டை (kōṭṭai) castle
Telugu ఏనుగు (ēnugu) elephant
Thai เรือ (reūa) ship
Turkish K kale castle
Ukrainian T тура (tura) tower
Urdu رخ (rukh)
Vietnamese X xe chariot
Welsh C castell castle

Heraldry

 
Arms of the English family of Rookwood, featuring chess rooks as a cant on the name

Chess rooks frequently occur as heraldic charges. Heraldic rooks are usually shown as they looked in medieval chess sets, with the usual battlements replaced by two outward-curving horns. They occur in arms from around the 13th century onwards.

In Canadian heraldry, the chess rook is the cadency mark of a fifth daughter.

Unicode

Unicode defines two codepoints for rook:

U+2656 White Chess Rook (HTML ♖)

U+265C Black Chess Rook (HTML ♜)

See also

Notes

  1. ^ (Sunnucks 1970)
  2. ^ Oxford English Dictionary, 2nd ed. (online version, accessed Jan. 27, 2009), entry for "Castle", def. 9. "Chess. One of the pieces, made to represent a castle; also called a ROOK.". New Oxford American Dictionary, 2nd ed. (2005) says that "castle" is informal and an "old-fashioned term for rook". The Oxford Companion to Chess, by David Hooper & Kenneth Whyld, 2nd ed. (1992), p. 344 says "In English-speaking countries non-players sometimes call it a castle...". Let's Play Chess by Bruce Pandolfini (1986) p. 30, says "The rook is the piece mistakenly called the castle."; The Everything Chess Basics Book by Peter Kurzdorfer and the United States Chess Federation, Adams Media 2003, page 30, says "... often incorrectly referred to as a castle by the uninitiated".
  3. ^ The Official Rules of Chess by Eric Schiller, The US Chess Federation Official Rules of Chess (five editions by various authors), Official Chess Handbook, by Kenneth Harkness, Official Chess Rulebook by Harkness, and The Official Laws of Chess by FIDE (two editions) all use only the term "rook". Books for beginners such as Bobby Fischer Teaches Chess, A World Champion's Guide to Chess by Susan Polgar, The Complete Book of Chess by I. A. Horowitz & P. L. Rothenberg, and Chess Fundamentals by José Capablanca (2006 revision by Nick de Firmian) also only mention "rook".
  4. ^ "The value of the chess pieces". Schach.de. Retrieved 2021-03-11.
  5. ^ "Understanding The Value Of Chess Pieces". ChessKid.com. Retrieved 2021-03-11.
  6. ^ (Fine & Benko 2003:586)
  7. ^ "Lev Polugaevsky vs Larry Melvyn Evans (1970)". www.chessgames.com.
  8. ^ (Griffiths 1992:102–3)
  9. ^ The two rooks are sometimes colloquially referred to as "pigs on the seventh", because they often threaten to "eat" the opponent's pieces or pawns.
  10. ^ (Alburt 2009:44)
  11. ^ (Davidson 1949:10)
  12. ^ 現代漢語詞典 (Modern Chinese Dictionary). ISBN 978-962-07-0211-2
  13. ^ "Article by Dr. Hans Holländer, "CYCLOPES, ELEPHANTS AND CHESS ROOKS"". Retrieved 26 February 2020.
  14. ^ "מילון מורפיקס: צריח". תרגום מורפיקס. Retrieved 9 January 2022.
  15. ^ (Hooper & Whyld 1996)
  16. ^ Horton 1959, p. 175
  17. ^ Stachowski, Marek (January 4, 2002). "Studia Etymologica Cracoviensia". Ksie̦garnia Akademicka – via Google Books.
  18. ^ "ม้า...เสน่ห์หมากรุก". www.siamsport.co.th. January 14, 2018.
  19. ^ Global, AIST. "Շախմատային նավակ". chessschool.am.
  20. ^ a b Davidson, Henry A. (2012-10-10). A Short History of Chess. Crown. ISBN 978-0-307-82829-3.
  21. ^ Tyson, Peter (2000). The eighth continent: life, death, and discovery in the lost world of Madagascar. HarperCollins. p. 138. ISBN 0-380-97577-7.
  22. ^ "English :: Kannada Online Dictionary". English :: Kannada Online Dictionary.
  23. ^ Candler, Howard (January 1, 1907). "How the Elephant became a Bishop: An Enquiry into the Origin of the Names of Chess Pieces". Archaeological Journal. 64 (1): 80–90. doi:10.1080/00665983.1907.10853048.
  24. ^ The Estonian chess terms were coined by Ado Grenzstein.
  25. ^ "Handbook". www.fide.com. Retrieved 22 March 2019. The pieces bear the names: Koenig, Dame, Turm, Laeufer, Springer, Bauer
  26. ^ H. J. R. Murray, A History of Chess, ch. 11

References

External links

rook, chess, rook, piece, game, chess, move, number, squares, horizontally, vertically, without, jumping, capture, enemy, piece, path, additionally, participate, castling, each, player, starts, game, with, rooks, each, corner, their, side, board, white, rookbl. The rook r ʊ k is a piece in the game of chess It may move any number of squares horizontally or vertically without jumping and it may capture an enemy piece on its path additionally it may participate in castling Each player starts the game with two rooks one in each corner on their own side of the board White rookBlack rook Formerly the rook from Persian رخ rokh rukh meaning chariot was alternatively called the tower marquess rector and comes count or earl 1 The term castle is considered to be informal incorrect or old fashioned 2 3 Contents 1 Placement and movement 2 Strategy 2 1 Relative value 2 2 Development 2 3 Endgame 3 History 3 1 Name translations 4 Heraldry 5 Unicode 6 See also 7 Notes 8 References 9 External linksThis article uses algebraic notation to describe chess moves Placement and movement Editabcdefgh8 877665544332211abcdefghStarting positions of the rooks abcdefgh8 877665544332211abcdefghThe white rook can move to any square marked with a white dot The black rook can move to squares with a black dot or it can capture the white pawn on e7 The white rooks start on the squares a1 and h1 while the black rooks start on a8 and h8 The rook moves horizontally or vertically through any number of unoccupied squares The rook cannot jump over pieces The rook may capture an enemy piece by moving to the square on which the enemy piece stands removing it from play The rook also participates with the king in a special move called castling wherein it is transferred to the square crossed by the king after the king is shifted two squares toward the rook Strategy EditRelative value Edit The rook is worth about five pawns In general rooks are stronger than bishops or knights and are considered greater in value than either of those pieces by nearly two pawns but less valuable than two minor pieces by approximately a pawn Two rooks are generally considered to be worth slightly more than a queen see chess piece relative value 4 Winning a rook for a bishop or knight is referred to as winning the exchange Rooks and queens are called major pieces or heavy pieces as opposed to bishops and knights the minor pieces 5 Development Edit In the opening the rooks are blocked in by other pieces and cannot immediately participate in the game so it is usually desirable to connect one s rooks on the first rank by castling and then clearing all pieces except the king and rooks from the first rank In that position the rooks support each other and can more easily move to occupy and control the most favorable files A common strategic goal is to develop a rook on the first rank of an open file i e one unobstructed by pawns of either player or a half open file i e one unobstructed by friendly pawns From this position the rook is relatively unexposed to risk but can exert control on every square on the file If one file is particularly important a player might advance one rook on it then position the other rook behind doubling the rooks A rook on the seventh rank the opponent s second rank is typically very powerful as it threatens the opponent s unadvanced pawns and hems in the enemy king A rook on the seventh rank is often considered sufficient compensation for a pawn 6 In the diagrammed position from a game between Lev Polugaevsky and Larry Evans 7 the rook on the seventh rank enables White to draw despite being a pawn down 8 Two rooks on the seventh rank are often enough to force victory by the blind swine mate or at least a draw by perpetual check 9 A white rook on the 7th rank Polugaevsky vs Evans 1970abcdefgh8 877665544332211abcdefghWhite to move draws Connected black rooks on the 7th rank Chigorin vs Steinitz Havana 1892abcdefgh8 877665544332211abcdefghBlack to move 32 Rxh2 and White resigns seeing that 33 Kg1 Rdg2 Endgame Edit Rooks are most powerful towards the end of a game i e the endgame when they can move unobstructed by pawns and control large numbers of squares They are somewhat clumsy at restraining enemy pawns from advancing towards promotion unless they can occupy the file behind the advancing pawn As well a rook best supports a friendly pawn towards promotion from behind it on the same file see Tarrasch rule In a position with a rook and one or two minor pieces versus two rooks generally in addition to pawns and possibly other pieces Lev Alburt advises that the player with the single rook should avoid exchanging the rook for one of his opponent s rooks 10 The rook is adept at delivering checkmate Below are a few examples of rook checkmates that are easy to force A single rook can force checkmate while a single minor piece cannot abcdefgh8 877665544332211abcdefghA king and rook mate The king and rook work together to force the enemy king to the edge of the board where it can be checkmated abcdefgh8 877665544332211abcdefghA back rank checkmate abcdefgh8 877665544332211abcdefghA two rook checkmate aka the ladder checkmate History EditFurther information History of chess In the medieval shatranj the rook symbolized a chariot The Persian word rukh means chariot 11 and the corresponding piece in the original Indian version chaturanga has the name ratha meaning chariot In modern times it is mostly known as ह थ elephant to Hindi speaking players while East Asian chess games such as xiangqi and shogi have names also meaning chariot 車 for the same piece 12 Antique Indian Mughal chess elephant made from sandalwood representing the rook 19th century illustration of a siege tower which the rook may be intended to represent The berserker used as a rook in the Lewis chessmen Persian war chariots were heavily armored carrying a driver and at least one ranged weapon bearer such as an archer The sides of the chariot were built to resemble fortified stone work giving the impression of small mobile buildings causing terror on the battlefield citation needed In Europe the castle or tower appears for the first time in the 16th century in Vida s 1550 Ludus Scacchia and then as a tower on the back of an elephant In time the elephant disappeared and only the tower was used as the piece 13 In the West the rook is almost universally represented as a crenellated turret The piece is called torre tower in Italian Portuguese Catalan and Spanish tour in French toren in Dutch Turm in German torn in Swedish and torni in Finnish In Hungarian it is bastya bastion and in Hebrew it is called צריח tsriʾaḥ meaning turret 14 In the British Museum s collection of the medieval Lewis chess pieces the rooks appear as stern warders or wild eyed berserker warriors Rooks are usually similar in appearance to small castles thus a rook is sometimes called a castle 15 though modern chess literature rarely if ever uses this term 16 In some languages the rook is called a ship Thai erux reua Armenian Նավակ navak Russian ladya ladya Javanese ꦥ ꦲ prahu This may be because of the use of an Arabic style V shaped rook piece which some may have mistaken for a ship 17 18 19 20 It is possible that the rendition comes from Sanskrit roka ship however no chaturanga pieces were ever called a roka Murray argued that the Javanese could not visualize a chariot moving through the jungles in sweeping fashion as the rook The only vehicle that moved in straight fashion was ship thus they replaced it with prahu Murray however did not give an explanation of why the Russians call the piece a ship 20 Peter Tyson suggests that there is a correlation between the name of the piece and the word rukh a mythical giant bird of prey from Persian mythology 21 In South Slavic languages it is called the cannon Top Romanised top In Kannada it is known as ಆನ aane meaning elephant 22 This is unusual as the term for elephant is in many other languages applied to the bishop 23 Name translations Edit Overview of chess piece names Language Rook TranslationAfrikaans T Toring towerAlbanian T Torra towerArabic ر رخ طابية rukhkh ṭabiya fortress castleAzerbaijani T Top cannonArmenian Ն Նավակ Navak shipBasque G Gaztelua castleBelarusian Taraskievica Ld ladzdzya boatBengali N ন ক nouka BoatBulgarian T top cannonCatalan T torre towerChinese R 車 ju chariotCzech V vez towerDanish T tarn towerDutch T toren kasteel tower castleEnglish R rook castleEsperanto T turo towerEstonian 24 V vanker chariot carriageFinnish T torni towerFrench T tour towerGalician T torre towerGeorgian ე ეტლი etli chariotGerman 25 T Turm towerGreek P pyrgos pyrgos towerHindi H ह थ hathi elephantHebrew צ צריח Tzariach towerHausa R sansanin fortressHungarian B bastya bastionIcelandic H hrokur rookIdo T turmo towerIndonesian B benteng castle fortressInterslavic Z zamok veza castle towerIrish C caiseal bulwarkItalian T torre towerJapanese R ルーク ruku Javanese B benteng fortressKannada ಆ ಆನ aane elephantKazakh T tura tura towerKorean R 룩 rug Latin T turris elephas tower elephant 26 Latvian T tornis towerLithuanian B bokstas towerLojban S slanydi u castleLuxembourgish T Tuerm towerMacedonian T top cannonMalayalam R ത ര theru chariotMarathi H हत त hatti elephantMongolian t tereg tereg chariotNorwegian Bokmal T tarn towerNorwegian Nynorsk T tarn towerOdia R ଡଙ ଗ ḍoṅga boatOromoPersian ق ر قلعه رخ castlePolish W wieza towerPortuguese T torre towerRomanian T turn tură towerRussian L ladya ladya boatScottish Gaelic T tur towerSerbo Croatian T top kula T top kula cannon towerNorthern Sotho N Ntlosebo MoshateSicilian T turru towerSlovak V veza towerSlovene T trdnjava castleSpanish T torre towerSwedish T torn towerTamil R க ட ட kōṭṭai castleTelugu ఏన గ enugu elephantThai r erux reua shipTurkish K kale castleUkrainian T tura tura towerUrdu رخ rukh Vietnamese X xe chariotWelsh C castell castleHeraldry Edit Arms of the English family of Rookwood featuring chess rooks as a cant on the nameChess rooks frequently occur as heraldic charges Heraldic rooks are usually shown as they looked in medieval chess sets with the usual battlements replaced by two outward curving horns They occur in arms from around the 13th century onwards In Canadian heraldry the chess rook is the cadency mark of a fifth daughter Unicode EditMain article Chess symbols in Unicode Unicode defines two codepoints for rook U 2656 White Chess Rook HTML amp 9814 U 265C Black Chess Rook HTML amp 9820 See also EditRook and pawn versus rook endgame Tarrasch rule rooks belong behind passed pawns Lucena position winning position Philidor position drawing positionNotes Edit Sunnucks 1970 Oxford English Dictionary 2nd ed online version accessed Jan 27 2009 entry for Castle def 9 Chess One of the pieces made to represent a castle also called a ROOK New Oxford American Dictionary 2nd ed 2005 says that castle is informal and an old fashioned term for rook The Oxford Companion to Chess by David Hooper amp Kenneth Whyld 2nd ed 1992 p 344 says In English speaking countries non players sometimes call it a castle Let s Play Chess by Bruce Pandolfini 1986 p 30 says The rook is the piece mistakenly called the castle The Everything Chess Basics Book by Peter Kurzdorfer and the United States Chess Federation Adams Media 2003 page 30 says often incorrectly referred to as a castle by the uninitiated The Official Rules of Chess by Eric Schiller The US Chess Federation Official Rules of Chess five editions by various authors Official Chess Handbook by Kenneth Harkness Official Chess Rulebook by Harkness and The Official Laws of Chess by FIDE two editions all use only the term rook Books for beginners such as Bobby Fischer Teaches Chess A World Champion s Guide to Chess by Susan Polgar The Complete Book of Chess by I A Horowitz amp P L Rothenberg and Chess Fundamentals by Jose Capablanca 2006 revision by Nick de Firmian also only mention rook The value of the chess pieces Schach de Retrieved 2021 03 11 Understanding The Value Of Chess Pieces ChessKid com Retrieved 2021 03 11 Fine amp Benko 2003 586 Lev Polugaevsky vs Larry Melvyn Evans 1970 www chessgames com Griffiths 1992 102 3 The two rooks are sometimes colloquially referred to as pigs on the seventh because they often threaten to eat the opponent s pieces or pawns Alburt 2009 44 Davidson 1949 10 現代漢語詞典 Modern Chinese Dictionary ISBN 978 962 07 0211 2 Article by Dr Hans Hollander CYCLOPES ELEPHANTS AND CHESS ROOKS Retrieved 26 February 2020 מילון מורפיקס צריח תרגום מורפיקס Retrieved 9 January 2022 Hooper amp Whyld 1996 Horton 1959 p 175 Stachowski Marek January 4 2002 Studia Etymologica Cracoviensia Ksie garnia Akademicka via Google Books ma esnhhmakruk www siamsport co th January 14 2018 Global AIST Շախմատային նավակ chessschool am a b Davidson Henry A 2012 10 10 A Short History of Chess Crown ISBN 978 0 307 82829 3 Tyson Peter 2000 The eighth continent life death and discovery in the lost world of Madagascar HarperCollins p 138 ISBN 0 380 97577 7 English Kannada Online Dictionary English Kannada Online Dictionary Candler Howard January 1 1907 How the Elephant became a Bishop An Enquiry into the Origin of the Names of Chess Pieces Archaeological Journal 64 1 80 90 doi 10 1080 00665983 1907 10853048 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 EditAlburt Lev December 2009 Back to Basics Chess Life 2009 12 44 45 Barden Leonard 1980 Play Better Chess with Leonard Barden Octopus Books Limited p 10 ISBN 0 7064 0967 1 Brace Edward R 1977 rook An Illustrated Dictionary of Chess Hamlyn Publishing Group pp 241 42 ISBN 1 55521 394 4 Davidson Henry 1949 A Short History of Chess 1981 paperback McKay ISBN 0 679 14550 8 Fine Reuben Benko Pal 2003 Basic Chess Endings 1941 2nd ed McKay ISBN 0 8129 3493 8 Griffiths Peter 1992 Exploring the Endgame American Chess Promotions ISBN 0 939298 83 X Hooper David Whyld Kenneth 1996 First pub 1992 rook The Oxford Companion to Chess 2nd ed Oxford University Press pp 343 44 ISBN 0 19 280049 3 Horton Byrne J 1959 Dictionary of modern chess New York Philosophical Library p 175 ISBN 0 8065 0173 1 OCLC 606992 Lasker Emanuel 1947 Lasker s Manual of Chess David McKay Company p 8 ISBN 0 486 20640 8 OCLC 3636924 Pandolfini Bruce 1986 Let s Play Chess Fireside ISBN 0 671 61983 7 Sunnucks Anne 1970 rook the The Encyclopaedia of Chess St Martins Press ISBN 978 0 7091 4697 1External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Chess rooks Piececlopedia Rook by Fergus Duniho and Hans Bodlaender The Chess Variant Pages Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Rook chess amp oldid 1153015036, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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