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Siegbert Tarrasch

Siegbert Tarrasch (German pronunciation: [ˈziːɡbɐt ˈtaraʃ]; 5 March 1862 – 17 February 1934) was a German chess player, considered to have been among the strongest players and most influential theoreticians of the late 19th and early 20th century.

Siegbert Tarrasch
Tarrasch, c. 1900
CountryPrussiaGermany
Born(1862-03-05)5 March 1862
Breslau, Kingdom of Prussia
(now Wrocław, Poland)
Died17 February 1934(1934-02-17) (aged 71)
Munich, Germany

Life edit

Tarrasch was born in Breslau, in what was then Prussian Silesia and now is Poland. Having finished school in 1880, he left Breslau to study medicine in Berlin and then in Halle. With his family, he settled in Nuremberg, Bavaria, and later in Munich, setting up a successful medical practice. He had five children. Tarrasch was Jewish, converted to Christianity in 1909,[1] and was a patriotic German who lost a son in World War I, yet he faced antisemitism in the early stages of the Third Reich.

Chess career edit

 
Siegbert Tarrasch

A medical doctor by profession, Tarrasch may have been the best player in the world in the early 1890s. He scored heavily against the ageing World Champion Wilhelm Steinitz in tournaments (+3−0=1) but refused an opportunity to challenge Steinitz for the world title in 1892 because of the demands of his medical practice.

 
Tarrasch and Mikhail Chigorin in Saint Petersburg, 1893

Soon afterwards, in St. Petersburg in 1893, Tarrasch drew a hard-fought match against Steinitz' challenger Mikhail Chigorin (+9−9=4) after leading most of the way. He also won four major tournaments in succession: Breslau 1889, Manchester 1890, Dresden 1892, and Leipzig 1894.

However, after Emanuel Lasker became world chess champion in 1894, Tarrasch could not match him. Fred Reinfeld wrote: "Tarrasch was destined to play second fiddle for the rest of his life."[2] For example, Lasker scored much better against mutual opponents, e.g. vs. Chigorin, Tarrasch had +2 over 34 games while Lasker scored +7 in 21; vs. Akiba Rubinstein, Tarrasch was −8 without a single win, while Lasker scored +2−1=2; vs. David Janowski, Tarrasch scored +3 compared to Lasker's huge +22; vs. Géza Maróczy, Tarrasch was +1 over 16 games while Lasker scored +4−0=1,[3] vs. Richard Teichmann Tarrasch scored +8−5=2,[4] while Lasker beat him all four tournament games.[5] However, Tarrasch had a narrow plus score against Harry Nelson Pillsbury of +6−5=2,[6] while Lasker was even +5−5=4.[7] Still, Tarrasch remained a powerful player, demolishing Frank Marshall in a match in 1905 (+8−1=8), and winning Ostend 1907 over Schlechter, Janowski, Marshall, Burn, and Chigorin.

There was no love lost between Tarrasch and Lasker. The story goes that when they were introduced at the opening of their 1908 championship match, Tarrasch clicked his heels, bowed stiffly, and said, "To you, Dr. Lasker, I have only three words, check and mate"—then left the room.[8] When Lasker finally agreed to a title match in 1908, he beat Tarrasch convincingly +8−3=5.

Tarrasch continued to be one of the leading players in the world for a while. He finished fourth in the very strong St. Petersburg 1914 chess tournament, behind only World Champion Lasker and future World Champions José Raúl Capablanca and Alexander Alekhine, and ahead of Marshall, Ossip Bernstein, Rubinstein, Nimzowitsch, Blackburne, Janowski, and Gunsberg. His win against Capablanca in the 19th round, though much less famous than Lasker's win against Capablanca the round before, was essential to enable Lasker to achieve his famous come-from-behind victory over Capablanca in the tournament. This tournament was probably Tarrasch's swan song, because his chess career was not very successful after this, although he still played some highly regarded games.

Tarrasch lost +0-5=1 to Lasker in a 1916 match.[9]

Chess teachings edit

Tarrasch was a very influential chess writer, and was called Praeceptor Germaniae, meaning "Teacher of Germany." He took some of Wilhelm Steinitz's ideas (e.g. control of the center, bishop pair, space advantage) and made them more accessible to the average chess player. In other areas, he departed from Steinitz. He emphasized piece mobility much more than Steinitz did, and disliked cramped positions, saying that they "had the germ of defeat."

Tarrasch formulated a very important rule in rook endgames that is often called the Tarrasch rule:

The rooks belong behind passed pawns, behind their own in order to support their advance, behind the enemy's in order to impede their advance.[10]

Chess publications edit

In 1895, Tarrasch's book Dreihundert Schachpartien was published. It was first translated into English in 1959 by Robin Ault and John Kirwan in a limited edition and a commercial edition in 1999 when S. Schwarz put out Three Hundred Chess Games. Tarrasch released Die moderne Schachpartie in 1912, but it has not been translated yet. He wrote a famous book about the St. Petersburg 1914 chess tournament, which was translated into English in 1993.[10] His fourth major book Das Schachspiel (1931), was translated by G. E. Smith and T. G. Bone as The Game of Chess (1935, ISBN 048625447X). It was his last book and his most successful.

He edited the magazine Deutsche Schachzeitung in 1897, and Tarrasch's Schachzeitung, for the last two years of his life.[11]

Clash with hypermodern school edit

He was a target of the hypermodern school, led by Richard Réti, Aron Nimzowitsch, and Savielly Tartakower, all of whom criticized his ideas as dogmatic. However, many modern masters regard Tarrasch's actual play as not dogmatic. According to American grandmaster Andrew Soltis, Tarrasch's chess was "all about piece mobility".[12]

As an example of his playing style see his victory on the Black side of the Advance French against Louis Paulsen (Nuremberg 1888):

1. e4 e6 2. d4 d5 3. e5 c5 4. c3 Nc6 5. Nf3 Qb6 6. Bd3 cxd4 Tarrasch gives this an exclamation mark, and points out that 6...Bd7 allows 7.dxc5 with a good game. However, most accounts credit Nimzowitsch with such anti-dogmatic hypermodern inventiveness when he played 7.dxc5 against Gersz Salwe almost a quarter of a century later.[13] 7. cxd4 Bd7 8. Be2 Nge7 9. b3 Nf5 10. Bb2 Bb4+ 11. Kf1 Be7 12. g3 a5 13. a4 Rc8 14. Bb5 Nb4 15. Bxd7+ Kxd7 16. Nc3 Nc6 17. Nb5 Na7 18. Nxa7 Qxa7 19. Qd3 Qa6 20. Qxa6 bxa6 21. Kg2 Rc2 22. Bc1 Rb8 23. Rb1 Rc3 24. Bd2 Rcxb3 25. Rxb3 Rxb3 26. Bxa5 Rb2 27. Bd2 Bb4 28. Bf4 h6 29. g4 Ne7 30. Ra1 Nc6 31. Bc1 Rc2 32. Ba3 Rc4 33. Bb2 Bc3 34. Bxc3 Rxc3 35. Rb1 Kc7 36. g5 Rc4 37. gxh6 gxh6 38. a5 Ra4 39. Kg3 Rxa5 40. Kg4 Ra3 41. Rd1 Rb3 42. h4 Ne7 43. Ne1 Nf5 44. Nd3 a5 45. Nc5 Rc3 46. Rb1 Nxd4 47. Na6+ Kd8 48. Rb8+ Rc8 49. Rb7 Ke8 50. Nc7+ Kf8 51. Nb5 Nxb5 52. Rxb5 Ra8 53. f4 a4 54. Rb1 a3 55. f5 a2 56. Ra1 Ra4+ 57. Kh5 Kg7 58. fxe6 fxe6 59. Rg1+ Kh8 60. Ra1 Kh7 61. Rg1 a1=Q 62. Rg7+ Kh8 0–1[14]

Contributions to opening theory edit

A number of chess openings are named after Tarrasch, with the most notable being:

  • The Tarrasch Defense, Tarrasch's favorite line against the Queen's Gambit in which Black takes on an isolated queen's pawn: 1.d4 d5 2.c4 e6 3.Nc3 c5!? 4.cxd5 exd5. A main line is then 5.Nf3 Nc6 6.g3 Nf6 7.Bg2 Be7 8.0-0 0-0. Tarrasch famously proclaimed, "The future will decide who has erred in estimating this defense, I or the chess world!"; today it is considered sound, though unfashionable.
  • The Tarrasch Variation of the French Defense (3.Nd2), which Tarrasch late in his career considered to be refuted by 3...c5 4.exd5 exd5, with Black again "acquiring" an isolated queen's pawn. This is not thought a refutation today, but is still one of Black's most important lines.
  • The Tarrasch Variation of the Ruy Lopez, usually known as the Open Defense (1.e4 e5 2.Nf3 Nc6 3.Bb5 a6 4.Ba4 Nf6 5.0-0 Nxe4).

Famous Tarrasch combinations edit

Tarrasch vs. Allies, 1914
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8
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
8
77
66
55
44
33
22
11
abcdefgh

In the game Tarrasch versus Allies, Black seems to be holding here (at least against an immediate catastrophe), because the black queen guards against Qb7+ (followed by Kxa5 Ra1#), while the black rook on c8 defends against Rxc5#. Tarrasch played the ingenious interference move 31.Bc7! (known as a Plachutta interference because the pieces both move orthogonally). This blocks off both defences, and whatever piece captures becomes overloaded. That is, if 31...Rxc7, the rook is overloaded, having to look after both the key squares, since the queen is blocked from b7. So White would play 32.Qb7+ Rxb7, deflecting the rook from defence of c5, allowing 33.Rxc5#. But if Black plays instead 31...Qxc7, the queen blocks off the rook's defence of c5 and becomes overloaded: 32.Rxc5+ Qxc5 deflects the queen from defence of b7, allowing 33.Qb7+ Kxa5 34.Ra1#. Black actually resigned after this move.

Tarrasch vs. Walbrodt, 1895
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8
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
8
77
66
55
44
33
22
11
abcdefgh

In the game against Carl Walbrodt, Tarrasch played rather poorly, and his opponent had the better of him for a long time. But the game was redeemed by the following startling combination:[15] 34.Rxd4 seems obvious, because 34...cxd4 allows 35.Bxd4 winning the queen. But Black has a seemingly strong counterattack which had to be foreseen ... 34...Nxg3 35.Nxg3 Rxg3+ 36.hxg3 Rxg3+ 37.Kf1! Rxd3 and now the startling 38.Rg4!! with devastating threats of 39. Rf8+ mating and Bxe5 not to mention cxd3 to follow. Black resigned.

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Chess Notes 5997 by Edward Winter (chess historian)
  2. ^ Fred Reinfeld, Tarrasch's Best Games of Chess, David McKay Co., Philadelphia, 1947, p. xvii.
  3. ^ Andy Soltis, Why Lasker Matters, Batsford, London, 2005, p. 161;
  4. ^ Chessgames.com database
  5. ^ Chessgames.com database
  6. ^ Chessgames.com database
  7. ^ Chessgames.com database
  8. ^ Harold C. Schoenberg, Grandmasters of Chess, W.W. Norton & Co., New York, Rev. Ed. 1981, p. 124.
  9. ^ "Lasker - Tarrasch (1916)".
  10. ^ a b Tarrasch, St Petersburg 1914: International Chess Tournament, translated by Dr Robert Maxham, Caissa Editions, Yorklyn, DE, 1993, ISBN 0-939433-17-6—comment on Frank James Marshall vs Emanuel Lasker, St. Petersburg (1914), rd 3, Apr-24, p. 83, emphasis in original.
  11. ^ The Game of Chess, Introduction
  12. ^ Soltis, Andrew (2012). What it takes to become a chess master. London: Batsford Books. p. 17. ISBN 9781849940269.
  13. ^ "Nimzovitch vs. Salwe, Karlsbad 1911". Chessgames.com.
  14. ^ "Louis Paulsen vs. Siegbert Tarrasch, Nuremberg 1888". Chessgames.com.
  15. ^ Soltis, Andy (1975). The Great Chess Tournaments and Their Stories. Chilton Book Company. p. 60. ISBN 0-8019-6138-6.

Bibliography

  • Isidore Singer, Tarrasch, Siegbert, in Jewish Encyclopedia Vol 12.
  • Andrew Soltis, Grandmaster Secrets: Endings (1997, 2003, ISBN 0-938650-66-1)
  • Wolfgang Kamm: Siegbert Tarrasch, Leben und Werk (2004, ISBN 3-933105-06-4).
  • Alfred Brinckmann: Siegbert Tarrasch, Lehrmeister der Schachwelt (1963).

External links edit

  • Siegbert Tarrasch player profile and games at Chessgames.com
  • Siegbert Tarrasch at Chessmetrics
  • Ballo, Harald (1996). Siegbert Tarrasch Part 1. ChessCafe.com.
  • Ballo, Harald (1996). Siegbert Tarrasch Part 2. ChessCafe.com.
  • 1908 Lasker–Tarrasch Title Match, mark-weeks.com
  • "Siegbert Tarrasch" by Edward Winter

siegbert, tarrasch, german, pronunciation, ˈziːɡbɐt, ˈtaraʃ, march, 1862, february, 1934, german, chess, player, considered, have, been, among, strongest, players, most, influential, theoreticians, late, 19th, early, 20th, century, tarrasch, 1900countryprussia. Siegbert Tarrasch German pronunciation ˈziːɡbɐt ˈtaraʃ 5 March 1862 17 February 1934 was a German chess player considered to have been among the strongest players and most influential theoreticians of the late 19th and early 20th century Siegbert TarraschTarrasch c 1900CountryPrussia GermanyBorn 1862 03 05 5 March 1862Breslau Kingdom of Prussia now Wroclaw Poland Died17 February 1934 1934 02 17 aged 71 Munich Germany Contents 1 Life 2 Chess career 3 Chess teachings 3 1 Chess publications 4 Clash with hypermodern school 5 Contributions to opening theory 6 Famous Tarrasch combinations 7 See also 8 References 9 External linksLife editTarrasch was born in Breslau in what was then Prussian Silesia and now is Poland Having finished school in 1880 he left Breslau to study medicine in Berlin and then in Halle With his family he settled in Nuremberg Bavaria and later in Munich setting up a successful medical practice He had five children Tarrasch was Jewish converted to Christianity in 1909 1 and was a patriotic German who lost a son in World War I yet he faced antisemitism in the early stages of the Third Reich Chess career edit nbsp Siegbert Tarrasch A medical doctor by profession Tarrasch may have been the best player in the world in the early 1890s He scored heavily against the ageing World Champion Wilhelm Steinitz in tournaments 3 0 1 but refused an opportunity to challenge Steinitz for the world title in 1892 because of the demands of his medical practice nbsp Tarrasch and Mikhail Chigorin in Saint Petersburg 1893 Soon afterwards in St Petersburg in 1893 Tarrasch drew a hard fought match against Steinitz challenger Mikhail Chigorin 9 9 4 after leading most of the way He also won four major tournaments in succession Breslau 1889 Manchester 1890 Dresden 1892 and Leipzig 1894 However after Emanuel Lasker became world chess champion in 1894 Tarrasch could not match him Fred Reinfeld wrote Tarrasch was destined to play second fiddle for the rest of his life 2 For example Lasker scored much better against mutual opponents e g vs Chigorin Tarrasch had 2 over 34 games while Lasker scored 7 in 21 vs Akiba Rubinstein Tarrasch was 8 without a single win while Lasker scored 2 1 2 vs David Janowski Tarrasch scored 3 compared to Lasker s huge 22 vs Geza Maroczy Tarrasch was 1 over 16 games while Lasker scored 4 0 1 3 vs Richard Teichmann Tarrasch scored 8 5 2 4 while Lasker beat him all four tournament games 5 However Tarrasch had a narrow plus score against Harry Nelson Pillsbury of 6 5 2 6 while Lasker was even 5 5 4 7 Still Tarrasch remained a powerful player demolishing Frank Marshall in a match in 1905 8 1 8 and winning Ostend 1907 over Schlechter Janowski Marshall Burn and Chigorin There was no love lost between Tarrasch and Lasker The story goes that when they were introduced at the opening of their 1908 championship match Tarrasch clicked his heels bowed stiffly and said To you Dr Lasker I have only three words check and mate then left the room 8 When Lasker finally agreed to a title match in 1908 he beat Tarrasch convincingly 8 3 5 Tarrasch continued to be one of the leading players in the world for a while He finished fourth in the very strong St Petersburg 1914 chess tournament behind only World Champion Lasker and future World Champions Jose Raul Capablanca and Alexander Alekhine and ahead of Marshall Ossip Bernstein Rubinstein Nimzowitsch Blackburne Janowski and Gunsberg His win against Capablanca in the 19th round though much less famous than Lasker s win against Capablanca the round before was essential to enable Lasker to achieve his famous come from behind victory over Capablanca in the tournament This tournament was probably Tarrasch s swan song because his chess career was not very successful after this although he still played some highly regarded games Tarrasch lost 0 5 1 to Lasker in a 1916 match 9 Chess teachings editTarrasch was a very influential chess writer and was called Praeceptor Germaniae meaning Teacher of Germany He took some of Wilhelm Steinitz s ideas e g control of the center bishop pair space advantage and made them more accessible to the average chess player In other areas he departed from Steinitz He emphasized piece mobility much more than Steinitz did and disliked cramped positions saying that they had the germ of defeat Tarrasch formulated a very important rule in rook endgames that is often called the Tarrasch rule The rooks belong behind passed pawns behind their own in order to support their advance behind the enemy s in order to impede their advance 10 Chess publications edit In 1895 Tarrasch s book Dreihundert Schachpartien was published It was first translated into English in 1959 by Robin Ault and John Kirwan in a limited edition and a commercial edition in 1999 when S Schwarz put out Three Hundred Chess Games Tarrasch released Die moderne Schachpartie in 1912 but it has not been translated yet He wrote a famous book about the St Petersburg 1914 chess tournament which was translated into English in 1993 10 His fourth major book Das Schachspiel 1931 was translated by G E Smith and T G Bone as The Game of Chess 1935 ISBN 048625447X It was his last book and his most successful He edited the magazine Deutsche Schachzeitung in 1897 and Tarrasch s Schachzeitung for the last two years of his life 11 Clash with hypermodern school editThis section uses algebraic notation to describe chess moves He was a target of the hypermodern school led by Richard Reti Aron Nimzowitsch and Savielly Tartakower all of whom criticized his ideas as dogmatic However many modern masters regard Tarrasch s actual play as not dogmatic According to American grandmaster Andrew Soltis Tarrasch s chess was all about piece mobility 12 As an example of his playing style see his victory on the Black side of the Advance French against Louis Paulsen Nuremberg 1888 1 e4 e6 2 d4 d5 3 e5 c5 4 c3 Nc6 5 Nf3 Qb6 6 Bd3 cxd4 Tarrasch gives this an exclamation mark and points out that 6 Bd7 allows 7 dxc5 with a good game However most accounts credit Nimzowitsch with such anti dogmatic hypermodern inventiveness when he played 7 dxc5 against Gersz Salwe almost a quarter of a century later 13 7 cxd4 Bd7 8 Be2 Nge7 9 b3 Nf5 10 Bb2 Bb4 11 Kf1 Be7 12 g3 a5 13 a4 Rc8 14 Bb5 Nb4 15 Bxd7 Kxd7 16 Nc3 Nc6 17 Nb5 Na7 18 Nxa7 Qxa7 19 Qd3 Qa6 20 Qxa6 bxa6 21 Kg2 Rc2 22 Bc1 Rb8 23 Rb1 Rc3 24 Bd2 Rcxb3 25 Rxb3 Rxb3 26 Bxa5 Rb2 27 Bd2 Bb4 28 Bf4 h6 29 g4 Ne7 30 Ra1 Nc6 31 Bc1 Rc2 32 Ba3 Rc4 33 Bb2 Bc3 34 Bxc3 Rxc3 35 Rb1 Kc7 36 g5 Rc4 37 gxh6 gxh6 38 a5 Ra4 39 Kg3 Rxa5 40 Kg4 Ra3 41 Rd1 Rb3 42 h4 Ne7 43 Ne1 Nf5 44 Nd3 a5 45 Nc5 Rc3 46 Rb1 Nxd4 47 Na6 Kd8 48 Rb8 Rc8 49 Rb7 Ke8 50 Nc7 Kf8 51 Nb5 Nxb5 52 Rxb5 Ra8 53 f4 a4 54 Rb1 a3 55 f5 a2 56 Ra1 Ra4 57 Kh5 Kg7 58 fxe6 fxe6 59 Rg1 Kh8 60 Ra1 Kh7 61 Rg1 a1 Q 62 Rg7 Kh8 0 1 14 Contributions to opening theory editA number of chess openings are named after Tarrasch with the most notable being The Tarrasch Defense Tarrasch s favorite line against the Queen s Gambit in which Black takes on an isolated queen s pawn 1 d4 d5 2 c4 e6 3 Nc3 c5 4 cxd5 exd5 A main line is then 5 Nf3 Nc6 6 g3 Nf6 7 Bg2 Be7 8 0 0 0 0 Tarrasch famously proclaimed The future will decide who has erred in estimating this defense I or the chess world today it is considered sound though unfashionable The Tarrasch Variation of the French Defense 3 Nd2 which Tarrasch late in his career considered to be refuted by 3 c5 4 exd5 exd5 with Black again acquiring an isolated queen s pawn This is not thought a refutation today but is still one of Black s most important lines The Tarrasch Variation of the Ruy Lopez usually known as the Open Defense 1 e4 e5 2 Nf3 Nc6 3 Bb5 a6 4 Ba4 Nf6 5 0 0 Nxe4 Famous Tarrasch combinations editTarrasch vs Allies 1914abcdefgh8 nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp 877665544332211abcdefgh In the game Tarrasch versus Allies Black seems to be holding here at least against an immediate catastrophe because the black queen guards against Qb7 followed by Kxa5 Ra1 while the black rook on c8 defends against Rxc5 Tarrasch played the ingenious interference move 31 Bc7 known as a Plachutta interference because the pieces both move orthogonally This blocks off both defences and whatever piece captures becomes overloaded That is if 31 Rxc7 the rook is overloaded having to look after both the key squares since the queen is blocked from b7 So White would play 32 Qb7 Rxb7 deflecting the rook from defence of c5 allowing 33 Rxc5 But if Black plays instead 31 Qxc7 the queen blocks off the rook s defence of c5 and becomes overloaded 32 Rxc5 Qxc5 deflects the queen from defence of b7 allowing 33 Qb7 Kxa5 34 Ra1 Black actually resigned after this move Tarrasch vs Walbrodt 1895abcdefgh8 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 877665544332211abcdefgh In the game against Carl Walbrodt Tarrasch played rather poorly and his opponent had the better of him for a long time But the game was redeemed by the following startling combination 15 34 Rxd4 seems obvious because 34 cxd4 allows 35 Bxd4 winning the queen But Black has a seemingly strong counterattack which had to be foreseen 34 Nxg3 35 Nxg3 Rxg3 36 hxg3 Rxg3 37 Kf1 Rxd3 and now the startling 38 Rg4 with devastating threats of 39 Rf8 mating and Bxe5 not to mention cxd3 to follow Black resigned See also editTarrasch Defense Tarrasch Trap Tarrasch rule List of Jewish chess playersReferences edit Chess Notes 5997 by Edward Winter chess historian Fred Reinfeld Tarrasch s Best Games of Chess David McKay Co Philadelphia 1947 p xvii Andy Soltis Why Lasker Matters Batsford London 2005 p 161 Chessgames com database Chessgames com database Chessgames com database Chessgames com database Harold C Schoenberg Grandmasters of Chess W W Norton amp Co New York Rev Ed 1981 p 124 Lasker Tarrasch 1916 a b Tarrasch St Petersburg 1914 International Chess Tournament translated by Dr Robert Maxham Caissa Editions Yorklyn DE 1993 ISBN 0 939433 17 6 comment on Frank James Marshall vs Emanuel Lasker St Petersburg 1914 rd 3 Apr 24 p 83 emphasis in original The Game of Chess Introduction Soltis Andrew 2012 What it takes to become a chess master London Batsford Books p 17 ISBN 9781849940269 Nimzovitch vs Salwe Karlsbad 1911 Chessgames com Louis Paulsen vs Siegbert Tarrasch Nuremberg 1888 Chessgames com Soltis Andy 1975 The Great Chess Tournaments and Their Stories Chilton Book Company p 60 ISBN 0 8019 6138 6 Bibliography Isidore Singer Tarrasch Siegbert in Jewish Encyclopedia Vol 12 Andrew Soltis Grandmaster Secrets Endings 1997 2003 ISBN 0 938650 66 1 Wolfgang Kamm Siegbert Tarrasch Leben und Werk 2004 ISBN 3 933105 06 4 Alfred Brinckmann Siegbert Tarrasch Lehrmeister der Schachwelt 1963 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Siegbert Tarrasch nbsp Wikiquote has quotations related to Siegbert Tarrasch Siegbert Tarrasch player profile and games at Chessgames com Siegbert Tarrasch at Chessmetrics Ballo Harald 1996 Siegbert Tarrasch Part 1 ChessCafe com Ballo Harald 1996 Siegbert Tarrasch Part 2 ChessCafe com 1908 Lasker Tarrasch Title Match mark weeks com Siegbert Tarrasch by Edward Winter Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Siegbert Tarrasch amp oldid 1206069090, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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