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Tamerlane chess

Tamerlane chess is a medieval chess variant. Like modern chess, it is derived from shatranj. It was developed in Central Asia during the reign of Emperor Timur, and its invention is also attributed to him.[1] Because Tamerlane chess is a larger variant of chaturanga, it is also called Shatranj Al-Kabir (Large chess or Great chess), as opposed to Shatranj as-saghir ("Small Chess"). Although the game is similar to modern chess,[2] it is distinctive in that there are varieties of pawn, each of which promotes in its own way.[3]

Board edit

A Tamerlane chessboard is made up of 110 uncheckered squares arranged in a 10×11 pattern ("camp"). Additional squares, known as citadels, protrude from the left side on the ninth row and from the right side on the second row, making a total of 112 squares.[1][4] When the opposing king occupies a player's citadel, the game is declared a draw. No piece other than a king may occupy a citadel.[citation needed]

There are several ways for an opening setup to be arranged. A common one is as follows:

  • White's side (bottom row, from the left): elephant, (space), camel, (space), war machine, (space), war machine, (space), camel, (space), elephant.
  • Second row (from the left): rook, knight, picket, giraffe, general, king, vizier, giraffe, picket, knight, rook.
  • Third row (from the left): pawn of pawns, pawn of war engines, pawn of camels, pawn of elephants, pawn of general, pawn of king, pawn of vizier, pawn of giraffes, pawn of pickets, pawn of knights, pawn of rooks.

Black's side mirrors White's.

a b c d e f g h i j k
10                       10
9                         9
8                       8
7                       7
6                       6
5                       5
4                       4
3                       3
2                         2
1                       1
a b c d e f g h i j k
Tamerlane chessboard in the "masculine" array
a b c d e f g h i j k
10                       10
9                         9
8                       8
7                       7
6                       6
5                       5
4                       4
3                       3
2                         2
1                       1
a b c d e f g h i j k
Tamerlane chessboard in the "feminine" array
a b c d e f g h i j k
10                       10
9                         9
8                       8
7                       7
6                       6
5                       5
4                       4
3                       3
2                         2
1                       1
a b c d e f g h i j k
Tamerlane chessboard in the third[5] array

Pieces edit

 
A Tamerlane chess set. The pieces approximate the appearance of Tamerlane chess pieces in 14th Century Persia.
 
Left to right: the faras (knight), zurafa (giraffe), pil (elephant), and tali'a (picket)

Anglicised versions of piece names are also given here.

  •    king (shah) – Moves as a traditional king, but once during the game it may switch places with any of its own pieces to evade check/checkmate or stalemate.
  •    general or counsellor (ferz) – Moves one square diagonally
  •    vizier or governor (wazir) – Moves one square horizontally or vertically
  •    giraffe (zurafa) – Moves one square diagonally and then a minimum of three squares horizontally or vertically (a restricted gryphon)
  •    picket (tali'a)[6] – Moves as a bishop in traditional chess, but must move a minimum of two squares
  •    knight (faras) – Moves as a knight in traditional chess
  •    rook (rukh) – Moves as a rook in traditional chess
  •    elephant (pil) – Moves two squares diagonally and is unobstructed by pieces in between
  •    camel (jamal/shutur) – Moves one diagonally and two straight, unobstructed by pieces in between. It moves in an "L"-shape, like an orthodox chess knight, with dimensions 3×1 instead of 2×1.
  •    war engine (dabbaba) – Moves two horizontally or vertically, unobstructed by pieces in-between
  •    pawns – Move as pawns in traditional chess, but with no initial double move or en passant capture. Every piece (including the pawn) has a corresponding pawn. Hence; pawn of king, pawn of vizier, pawn of giraffes, etc.[citation needed]

Rules edit

 
Timur The Conqueror, the inventor of the game

Beginning the game edit

The player going first is determined by a roll of dice.[citation needed]

The object edit

The object of Tamerlane chess, as in modern chess, is to checkmate the opposing shah (king). Unlike in modern chess, stalemating an opponent is also a win.[citation needed]

Promotion edit

Upon reaching the last rank on the board, a pawn is promoted to its corresponding piece. Thus, the pawn of giraffes becomes a giraffe, etc. Exceptions to this are the pawn of kings and pawn of pawns.[citation needed]

A pawn of kings becomes a prince. It moves as a king. If both a prince and a king exist simultaneously on the board, one of the two must be captured [like a regular piece] before the other can be checked/checkmated or stalemated to win the game.[a][citation needed]

When the pawn of pawns reaches the last rank, it stays there and cannot be taken. As soon as a situation develops where the opponent cannot escape losing a piece to a pawn, or where a pawn may attack two opposing units simultaneously (forked), the player must move his/her pawn to that location. It moves to this location even if the square is occupied, either by an allied or opposing piece. The piece occupying the square is removed from the board. On the pawn's next move, it may capture any piece it is attacking. It then continues forward on the board as a pawn. Upon the second promotion of this pawn, it moves to the starting point of the pawn of king. Upon the third promotion it becomes an adventitious king, which has the moves of the king, with one special exception as described in the next section. If an adventitious king exists on the board simultaneously with a prince and/or a king, they must be captured like a regular piece until only one remains, which must then be checkmated or stalemated to win.[7]

The citadels edit

The two extra squares that protrude from the left of the ninth rank and the right of the second rank are called citadels (husun, singular hisn). If, at any time during the game a player can move his king into his opponent's citadel, he can declare the game a draw. This is advantageous for a losing player as being stalemated is considered a loss in Tamerlane chess. Alternatively, if a player has a prince or adventitious king on the board when his shah enters his opponent's citadel, his shah can trade places with either of those pieces, and the game continues. The prince or adventitious king can later move out of the citadel to make way for the king to enter again, but the exchange privilege may only be used once. [citation needed]

The shah (king) ranks higher than the prince, which ranks higher than the adventitious king. Only the highest ranking of the three on the board can enter the opponent's citadel.[citation needed]

The adventitious king has the special honor of being the only piece on the board that can enter his own citadel. Upon entering, it becomes immune, thus blocking the opponent from entering the citadel and declaring a draw.[8]

Other edit

Once during the game a player may exchange a checked king for another non-royal piece. A player may move into check if he holds multiple kings. There is no castling or en passant moves in Tamerlane chess. Baring the opponent's king is not considered a win in Tamerlane chess, as the bared king still has the chance to enter the opponent's citadel. There is no three-fold repetition or 50-move draw in Tamerlane chess.[citation needed]

Full Tamerlane chess edit

In a few manuscripts the empty squares on the back rank are filled with new types of pieces. The following setup appears in ms 7322 (British Museum):[9]

  • Elephant (a1), Lion (b1), Knight (c1), Bull (d1), War Engine (e1), Revealer (f1), War Engine (g1), Bull (h1), Camel (i1), Lion (j1), Elephant (k1)
  • Rook (a2), Knight (b2), Picket (c2), Giraffe (d2), General (e2), King (f2), Sea Monster (g2), Giraffe (h2), Picket (i2), Knight (j2), Rook (k2)
  • Pawn of Pawns (a3), Pawn of Knights (b3), Pawn of Camels (c3), Pawn of War Engines (d3), Pawn of Generals (e3), Pawn of Kings (f3), Pawn of Sea Monsters (g3), Pawn of Giraffes (h3), Pawn of Pickets (i3), Pawn of Lions (j3), Pawn of Rooks (k3)
  • Pawn of Bulls (c4), Pawn of Revealers (f4), Pawn of Elephants (i4).
a b c d e f g h i j k
10                       10
9                         9
8                       8
7                       7
6                       6
5                       5
4                       4
3                       3
2                         2
1                       1
a b c d e f g h i j k
Tamerlane chessboard in the full array
  •    Lion (‘asad)
  •    Bull (thaurs)
  •    Revealer (kashshâf)
  •    Sea Monster (luxm)

Black's 1st, 2nd, and 3rd rows are arranged following rotation symmetry as in the standard setup: but the 4th row is arranged with reflection symmetry, so that the pawns of bulls face each other. Note that there is only one camel, but three knights (one knight replaces the missing camel). A sea monster replaces the vizier.

The manuscript does not offer guidance as to how the extra pieces move. Duncan Forbes suggested in 1860 that the lion should combine the moves of rook and giraffe; the bull should combine the moves of picket and giraffe; and the revealer should combine the moves of picket and rook. (He gave the picket the move of the modern bishop, thus making the revealer identical to the modern queen.) Jean-Louis Cazaux suggested in 2012 instead that the extra pieces were simple leapers: the lion a (3,0)-leaper, the bull a (3,2)-leaper, and the revealer a (3,3)-leaper. Both assume that the sea monster is identical to the vizier: a (1,0)-leaper.[citation needed]

Tamerlane Chess Club edit

A public chess club in Jamestown, New York, named Tamerlane Chess Club, is dedicated to this game as well as other ancient chess variants.[10][11]

Notes edit

  1. ^ This idea of allowing multiple kings on each side through promotion was coincidentally also invented about a century earlier in Japan in the game of dai shogi.

References edit

  1. ^ a b Cazaux, Jean-Louis and Knowlton, Rick (2017). A World of Chess, p. 31. McFarland. ISBN 9780786494279. "Often known as Tamerlane chess, [its invention] is traditionally attributed to the conqueror himself."
  2. ^ Gollon, John (November 21, 1968). Chess variations, ancient, regional, and modern. C. E. Tuttle Co. ISBN 9780804811224 – via Google Books.
  3. ^ Marinelli, Filippo (November 21, 1826). "Triple Chess". Valpy – via Google Books.
  4. ^ Falkener, Edward (1892). Games Ancient and Oriental. Longmans, Green and Company. [ISBN unspecified].
  5. ^ Muhammad ibn Arabshah. "Aja'ib al-Maqdur fi Nawa'ib al-Taymur". Retrieved 17 July 2020.
  6. ^ Cazaux & Knowlton (2017), p. 360, n.21. "Talia means scout, vanguard, outpost, picket, advanced post, spy, a group of soldiers or troops placed on a line forward of a position to warn against an enemy advance."
  7. ^ John Gollon, Chess Variants, Ancient, Regional and Modern, pp. 76–77
  8. ^ H.J.R. Murray, A History of Chess, 1913
  9. ^ "Full Tamerlane Chess".
  10. ^ "Tamerlane Chess Club". www.facebook.com.
  11. ^ "US Chess MSA – Affiliate Details   (General)". www.uschess.org.

Bibliography

Further reading edit

External links edit

tamerlane, chess, medieval, chess, variant, like, modern, chess, derived, from, shatranj, developed, central, asia, during, reign, emperor, timur, invention, also, attributed, because, larger, variant, chaturanga, also, called, shatranj, kabir, large, chess, g. Tamerlane chess is a medieval chess variant Like modern chess it is derived from shatranj It was developed in Central Asia during the reign of Emperor Timur and its invention is also attributed to him 1 Because Tamerlane chess is a larger variant of chaturanga it is also called Shatranj Al Kabir Large chess or Great chess as opposed to Shatranj as saghir Small Chess Although the game is similar to modern chess 2 it is distinctive in that there are varieties of pawn each of which promotes in its own way 3 Contents 1 Board 2 Pieces 3 Rules 3 1 Beginning the game 3 2 The object 3 3 Promotion 3 4 The citadels 3 5 Other 4 Full Tamerlane chess 5 Tamerlane Chess Club 6 Notes 7 References 8 Further reading 9 External linksBoard editA Tamerlane chessboard is made up of 110 uncheckered squares arranged in a 10 11 pattern camp Additional squares known as citadels protrude from the left side on the ninth row and from the right side on the second row making a total of 112 squares 1 4 When the opposing king occupies a player s citadel the game is declared a draw No piece other than a king may occupy a citadel citation needed There are several ways for an opening setup to be arranged A common one is as follows White s side bottom row from the left elephant space camel space war machine space war machine space camel space elephant Second row from the left rook knight picket giraffe general king vizier giraffe picket knight rook Third row from the left pawn of pawns pawn of war engines pawn of camels pawn of elephants pawn of general pawn of king pawn of vizier pawn of giraffes pawn of pickets pawn of knights pawn of rooks Black s side mirrors White s a b c d e f g h i j k 10 nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp 10 9 nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp 9 8 nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp 8 7 nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp 7 6 nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp 6 5 nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp 5 4 nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp 4 3 nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp 3 2 nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp 2 1 nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp 1 a b c d e f g h i j k Tamerlane chessboard in the masculine array a b c d e f g h i j k 10 nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp 10 9 nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp 9 8 nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp 8 7 nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp 7 6 nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp 6 5 nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp 5 4 nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp 4 3 nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp 3 2 nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp 2 1 nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp 1 a b c d e f g h i j k Tamerlane chessboard in the feminine array a b c d e f g h i j k 10 nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp 10 9 nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp 9 8 nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp 8 7 nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp 7 6 nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp 6 5 nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp 5 4 nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp 4 3 nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp 3 2 nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp 2 1 nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp 1 a b c d e f g h i j k Tamerlane chessboard in the third 5 arrayPieces edit nbsp A Tamerlane chess set The pieces approximate the appearance of Tamerlane chess pieces in 14th Century Persia nbsp Left to right the faras knight zurafa giraffe pil elephant and tali a picket Anglicised versions of piece names are also given here nbsp nbsp king shah Moves as a traditional king but once during the game it may switch places with any of its own pieces to evade check checkmate or stalemate nbsp nbsp general or counsellor ferz Moves one square diagonally nbsp nbsp vizier or governor wazir Moves one square horizontally or vertically nbsp nbsp giraffe zurafa Moves one square diagonally and then a minimum of three squares horizontally or vertically a restricted gryphon nbsp nbsp picket tali a 6 Moves as a bishop in traditional chess but must move a minimum of two squares nbsp nbsp knight faras Moves as a knight in traditional chess nbsp nbsp rook rukh Moves as a rook in traditional chess nbsp nbsp elephant pil Moves two squares diagonally and is unobstructed by pieces in between nbsp nbsp camel jamal shutur Moves one diagonally and two straight unobstructed by pieces in between It moves in an L shape like an orthodox chess knight with dimensions 3 1 instead of 2 1 nbsp nbsp war engine dabbaba Moves two horizontally or vertically unobstructed by pieces in between nbsp nbsp pawns Move as pawns in traditional chess but with no initial double move or en passant capture Every piece including the pawn has a corresponding pawn Hence pawn of king pawn of vizier pawn of giraffes etc citation needed Rules edit nbsp Timur The Conqueror the inventor of the game Beginning the game edit The player going first is determined by a roll of dice citation needed The object edit The object of Tamerlane chess as in modern chess is to checkmate the opposing shah king Unlike in modern chess stalemating an opponent is also a win citation needed Promotion edit Upon reaching the last rank on the board a pawn is promoted to its corresponding piece Thus the pawn of giraffes becomes a giraffe etc Exceptions to this are the pawn of kings and pawn of pawns citation needed A pawn of kings becomes a prince It moves as a king If both a prince and a king exist simultaneously on the board one of the two must be captured like a regular piece before the other can be checked checkmated or stalemated to win the game a citation needed When the pawn of pawns reaches the last rank it stays there and cannot be taken As soon as a situation develops where the opponent cannot escape losing a piece to a pawn or where a pawn may attack two opposing units simultaneously forked the player must move his her pawn to that location It moves to this location even if the square is occupied either by an allied or opposing piece The piece occupying the square is removed from the board On the pawn s next move it may capture any piece it is attacking It then continues forward on the board as a pawn Upon the second promotion of this pawn it moves to the starting point of the pawn of king Upon the third promotion it becomes an adventitious king which has the moves of the king with one special exception as described in the next section If an adventitious king exists on the board simultaneously with a prince and or a king they must be captured like a regular piece until only one remains which must then be checkmated or stalemated to win 7 The citadels edit The two extra squares that protrude from the left of the ninth rank and the right of the second rank are called citadels husun singular hisn If at any time during the game a player can move his king into his opponent s citadel he can declare the game a draw This is advantageous for a losing player as being stalemated is considered a loss in Tamerlane chess Alternatively if a player has a prince or adventitious king on the board when his shah enters his opponent s citadel his shah can trade places with either of those pieces and the game continues The prince or adventitious king can later move out of the citadel to make way for the king to enter again but the exchange privilege may only be used once citation needed The shah king ranks higher than the prince which ranks higher than the adventitious king Only the highest ranking of the three on the board can enter the opponent s citadel citation needed The adventitious king has the special honor of being the only piece on the board that can enter his own citadel Upon entering it becomes immune thus blocking the opponent from entering the citadel and declaring a draw 8 Other edit Once during the game a player may exchange a checked king for another non royal piece A player may move into check if he holds multiple kings There is no castling or en passant moves in Tamerlane chess Baring the opponent s king is not considered a win in Tamerlane chess as the bared king still has the chance to enter the opponent s citadel There is no three fold repetition or 50 move draw in Tamerlane chess citation needed Full Tamerlane chess editIn a few manuscripts the empty squares on the back rank are filled with new types of pieces The following setup appears in ms 7322 British Museum 9 Elephant a1 Lion b1 Knight c1 Bull d1 War Engine e1 Revealer f1 War Engine g1 Bull h1 Camel i1 Lion j1 Elephant k1 Rook a2 Knight b2 Picket c2 Giraffe d2 General e2 King f2 Sea Monster g2 Giraffe h2 Picket i2 Knight j2 Rook k2 Pawn of Pawns a3 Pawn of Knights b3 Pawn of Camels c3 Pawn of War Engines d3 Pawn of Generals e3 Pawn of Kings f3 Pawn of Sea Monsters g3 Pawn of Giraffes h3 Pawn of Pickets i3 Pawn of Lions j3 Pawn of Rooks k3 Pawn of Bulls c4 Pawn of Revealers f4 Pawn of Elephants i4 a b c d e f g h i j k 10 nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp 10 9 nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp 9 8 nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp 8 7 nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp 7 6 nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp 6 5 nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp 5 4 nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp 4 3 nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp 3 2 nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp 2 1 nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp 1 a b c d e f g h i j k Tamerlane chessboard in the full array nbsp nbsp Lion asad nbsp nbsp Bull thaurs nbsp nbsp Revealer kashshaf nbsp nbsp Sea Monster luxm Black s 1st 2nd and 3rd rows are arranged following rotation symmetry as in the standard setup but the 4th row is arranged with reflection symmetry so that the pawns of bulls face each other Note that there is only one camel but three knights one knight replaces the missing camel A sea monster replaces the vizier The manuscript does not offer guidance as to how the extra pieces move Duncan Forbes suggested in 1860 that the lion should combine the moves of rook and giraffe the bull should combine the moves of picket and giraffe and the revealer should combine the moves of picket and rook He gave the picket the move of the modern bishop thus making the revealer identical to the modern queen Jean Louis Cazaux suggested in 2012 instead that the extra pieces were simple leapers the lion a 3 0 leaper the bull a 3 2 leaper and the revealer a 3 3 leaper Both assume that the sea monster is identical to the vizier a 1 0 leaper citation needed Tamerlane Chess Club editA public chess club in Jamestown New York named Tamerlane Chess Club is dedicated to this game as well as other ancient chess variants 10 11 Notes edit This idea of allowing multiple kings on each side through promotion was coincidentally also invented about a century earlier in Japan in the game of dai shogi References edit a b Cazaux Jean Louis and Knowlton Rick 2017 A World of Chess p 31 McFarland ISBN 9780786494279 Often known as Tamerlane chess its invention is traditionally attributed to the conqueror himself Gollon John November 21 1968 Chess variations ancient regional and modern C E Tuttle Co ISBN 9780804811224 via Google Books Marinelli Filippo November 21 1826 Triple Chess Valpy via Google Books Falkener Edward 1892 Games Ancient and Oriental Longmans Green and Company ISBN unspecified Muhammad ibn Arabshah Aja ib al Maqdur fi Nawa ib al Taymur Retrieved 17 July 2020 Cazaux amp Knowlton 2017 p 360 n 21 Talia means scout vanguard outpost picket advanced post spy a group of soldiers or troops placed on a line forward of a position to warn against an enemy advance John Gollon Chess Variants Ancient Regional and Modern pp 76 77 H J R Murray A History of Chess 1913 Full Tamerlane Chess Tamerlane Chess Club www facebook com US Chess MSA Affiliate Details General www uschess org Bibliography Cazaux Jean Louis Knowlton Rick 2017 A World of Chess Its Development and Variations through Centuries and Civilizations McFarland ISBN 978 0 7864 9427 9 Falkener Edward 1961 1892 XVI Tamerlane s Chess Games Ancient and Oriental and How to Play Them Dover Publications Inc pp 197 216 ISBN 0 486 20739 0 Gollon John 1973 Chess Variations Ancient Regional and Modern Charles E Tuttle Company Inc ISBN 0 8048 1122 9 Further reading editPritchard D B 1994 Timur s Great Chess The Encyclopedia of Chess Variants Games amp Puzzles Publications pp 314 15 ISBN 0 9524142 0 1 Pritchard D B 2007 Timur s Great Chess In Beasley John ed The Classified Encyclopedia of Chess Variants John Beasley pp 270 71 ISBN 978 0 9555168 0 1 External links editTamerlane chess by Hans Bodlaender at The Chess Variant Pages Rudolph Jess ed Tamerlane Chess Timur s Chess CWRUMS at the Wayback Machine archived 8 February 2012 Cazaux Jean Louis 28 09 2012 Tamerlane Chess History Chess Free Fr Tamerlane Chess a simple program by Ed Friedlander Java Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Tamerlane chess amp oldid 1219447031, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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