Gioachino Greco on the Game of Chess |
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Page v
Gioachino Greco. PREFACE . GRECO has been justly celebrated as a first - rate player , and his work is considered by good judges as exhibiting great skill and ingenuity , and abounding with brilliant and instructive situations . It has ...
Gioachino Greco. PREFACE . GRECO has been justly celebrated as a first - rate player , and his work is considered by good judges as exhibiting great skill and ingenuity , and abounding with brilliant and instructive situations . It has ...
Page vi
... player generally makes the first mistake . Greco has paid but little attention to the arrange- ment of his games . I ... player of the White , and the third person the player of the Black pieces . The following account of Greco is ...
... player generally makes the first mistake . Greco has paid but little attention to the arrange- ment of his games . I ... player of the White , and the third person the player of the Black pieces . The following account of Greco is ...
Page vii
... player did not find his match any where . He went to all the courts in Europe , and signalized him- self there at Chess in a most surprising manner . He found famous players at the court of France , such as the Duke of Nemours , Mr ...
... player did not find his match any where . He went to all the courts in Europe , and signalized him- self there at Chess in a most surprising manner . He found famous players at the court of France , such as the Duke of Nemours , Mr ...
Page viii
... player , but to become a first rate player , genius and much study are indispen- sable requisites . This edition has a print as a frontispiece copied from a very fine one in small folio , from a picture of the same size by C. D. Moor ...
... player , but to become a first rate player , genius and much study are indispen- sable requisites . This edition has a print as a frontispiece copied from a very fine one in small folio , from a picture of the same size by C. D. Moor ...
Page ix
... player , and not undeserving the attention even of the scientific amateur ; my earnest desire has been to facilitate the knowledge of a game to which I have devoted the greater part of my leisure hours . I • EXPLANATION OF THE Figures ...
... player , and not undeserving the attention even of the scientific amateur ; my earnest desire has been to facilitate the knowledge of a game to which I have devoted the greater part of my leisure hours . I • EXPLANATION OF THE Figures ...
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Common terms and phrases
advance Q. P. Adversary adverse Q attacked Kt B. K. B. to Q. B. B. K. Kt B. Q. takes best move better to play Black plays castles check with Q checks 17 checks BLACK fourth move K. B. P. and checks K. B. P. two squares K. B. second square K. B. square K. B. takes K. B. P. K. B. third sq K. B. third square K. B. to adv K. B. to Q K. P. two squares K. R. P. one step Piano Game play Q play Q. B. P. Player push Q. P. Q. B. fourth sq Q. B. fourth square Q. B. P. one square Q. P. one square Q. P. one step retakes Rook second square 13 square 11 square 9 square and checkmates square and checks takes K. P. takes Kt takes Q takes the Kt W. Q. B. P. one step White taking
Popular passages
Page 17 - ... his men in their vacant hours, as to inflame their military ardour, the game being wholly founded on the principles of war. The stratagem succeeded to his wish. The soldiery were delighted with the game, and forgot, in their daily contests for victory, the inconveniences of their post.
Page xiv - Princes, in its passage through Persia, were changed into a single Vizier, or Minister of State, with the enlarged portion of delegated authority that exists there ; instead of whom, the European nations, with their usual gallantry, adopted a Queen on their Board. That the river between the parties is...
Page xv - That the river between the parties is expressive of the general face of this country, where a battle could hardly be fought without encountering an interruption of this kind, which the soldier was here taught to overcome ; but that, on the introduction of the Game into Persia, the Board changed with the dry nature of the region, and the contest was decided on terra firma. And lastly, that in no account of the origin of Chess, that I have read, has the tale been so characteristic or consistent as...
Page viii - Chess || Made Easy : || Or, The || Games || Of || Gioachino Greco, || The Calabrian ; || With Additional || Games and Openings, || Illustrated with || Remarks and General Rules. \ The Whole so contrived, that any Per- || son may learn to play in a few Days, || without any farther Assistance.
Page xii - The very next day my Mandarin brought me the Board and Equipage ; and I found, that the Bramins were neither mistaken touching the board, which has a river in the middle, to divide the contending parties, nor in the powers of the King, who is entrenched in a fort, and moves only in that space, in every direction. But, what I did not...
Page 17 - He was a man of genius as well as a good soldier; and, having meditated for some time on the subject, he invented the game of Chess, as well for an amusement to his men in their vacant hours as to inflame their military...
Page xii - ... still used in the Indian armies, who is stationed between the lines of each party, acts literally with the motion of the rocket, by vaulting over a man, and taking his adversary at the other end of the board. Except that the king has his two sons to support him, instead of a queen, the game in other respects is like ours, as will appear in the plan of the board and pieces I have the honour to enclose, together with directions to place the men and play the game.
Page 153 - Some historians have referred the invention of chess to the philosopher Xerxes; others to the Grecian prince Palamedes; some to the brothers Lydo and Tyrrhene; and others, again, to the Egyptians. The Chinese, the Hindoos...