The History of Chess: From the Time of the Early Invention of the Game in India Till the Period of Its Establishment in Western and Central Europe |
From inside the book
Results 6-10 of 29
Page 95
... consider as a modern innovation . - Vide Pratt's Philidor , 1825 , p . 514 . Let me not be here misunderstood , when I speak of Philidor . I fully admit that he held the first rank in Chess - playing , but it does not thence follow that ...
... consider as a modern innovation . - Vide Pratt's Philidor , 1825 , p . 514 . Let me not be here misunderstood , when I speak of Philidor . I fully admit that he held the first rank in Chess - playing , but it does not thence follow that ...
Page 104
... consider the system well worthy of being introduced and enforced at all our Chess - clubs . To all true lovers of the noble game , especially to the young and rising players , the prospect of attaining a higher grade would prove a much ...
... consider the system well worthy of being introduced and enforced at all our Chess - clubs . To all true lovers of the noble game , especially to the young and rising players , the prospect of attaining a higher grade would prove a much ...
Page 126
... consider that if , instead of a Bishop , White had a Rook or a Knight , he would have lost the game in the above instance , for the King , together with the Queens and Bishops , would have ultimately secured the Rook or Knight . If we ...
... consider that if , instead of a Bishop , White had a Rook or a Knight , he would have lost the game in the above instance , for the King , together with the Queens and Bishops , would have ultimately secured the Rook or Knight . If we ...
Page 151
... consider him to have been a renegade Jew , for his idiom and mode of expression are altogether Hebrew . His theory is , that " this Perfect Chess , " as he uniformly styles it , " was the invention of the Great Hermes who lived in the ...
... consider him to have been a renegade Jew , for his idiom and mode of expression are altogether Hebrew . His theory is , that " this Perfect Chess , " as he uniformly styles it , " was the invention of the Great Hermes who lived in the ...
Page 152
... consider the follow- ing approximate scale to be not far from the truth . At the same time we shall give once for all the Arabic and Persian names of the Pieces , as well as the English names , so far as our language possesses them ...
... consider the follow- ing approximate scale to be not far from the truth . At the same time we shall give once for all the Arabic and Persian names of the Pieces , as well as the English names , so far as our language possesses them ...
Other editions - View all
The History of Chess: From the Time of the Early Invention of the Game in ... Duncan Forbes No preview available - 2017 |
Common terms and phrases
adverse King alluded ancient Hindū appears Arabian Arabic army Asiatic assertion Baidak Bishop Black Bland's Brahmans Burmha Byzantine Caliph called Camel capture Castle century chapter Chariot Chaturanga checkmate Chess Player's Chronicle Chess-board Chess-players Chessmen Chinese colour court diagram dice Elephant Essay Europe Farz Farzin Firdausī four Frederic Madden game of Chaturanga game of Chess give Greek Hindus honour Horse Hyde India infer invented King's Knight language Lastly Latin latter Ludus Latrunculorum mate means mediæval game merely modern game moves and powers Naushīrawān odds Oriental origin of Chess original passage Pawn period Persian pieces played player Prince probable Purāna Queen reader received the game reign respecting Rook Rukh sage Sanskrit Saracens Sassa Shāhnāma Shatranj Ship side Sir William Jones suppose TAWLBWRDD term throw-board tion translation victory Wazir White word writers Yudhishthira
Popular passages
Page 178 - At the nuptials of the same prince, a thousand pearls of the largest size were showered on the head of the bride, and a lottery of lands and houses displayed the capricious bounty of fortune.
Page 297 - The beautiful simplicity and extreme perfection of the game, as it is commonly played in Europe and Asia, convince me that it was invented by one effort of some great genius ; not completed by gradual improvements, but formed, to use the phrase of Italian critics, by the first •intention...
Page 277 - Brahmins 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 165 - O true believers, surely wine, and lots, and images, and divining arrows, are an abomination of the work of Satan; therefore avoid them, that ye may prosper. Satan seeketh to sow dissension and hatred among you, by means of wine and lots, and to divert you from remembering God, and from prayer; will ye not therefore abstain from them?
Page 235 - On the festival of Christmas, the last year of the eighth century, Charlemagne appeared in the church of St. Peter; and, to gratify the vanity of Rome, he had exchanged the simple dress of his country for the habit of a patrician. 98 After the celebration of the holy mysteries, Leo suddenly placed a precious crown on his head...
Page lix - Hindus are not only on a par with the least civilized nations of the Old and New World, but they are plunged almost without exception in the lowest depths of immorality and crime. Considered merely in a literary capacity, the description of the Hindus in the History of British India, is open to censure for its...
Page 166 - ... tables, &c. And they are reckoned so ill in themselves, that the testimony of him who plays at them is, by the more rigid, judged to be of no validity in a court of justice. Chess is almost the only game which the Mohammedan doctors allow to be lawful (though it has been a doubt with some...
Page 253 - The King does not Castle, but is allowed the move of a Knight once in the game; not, however, to take any piece, nor can he exercise this privilege after having been once checked.
Page 182 - Arabian learning shone with a brighter lustre, and continued to flourish to a later period, than in the schools of the East. Cordova, Seville, and Granada, rivalled each other in the magnificence of their academies, colleges, and libraries.
Page lvi - ... merit of not being in this respect inferior to other nations. Their games are very numerous, and for the most part very ingenious ; they are divided into the sedentary and gymnastic. It is a curious fact, and worthy of notice, that among the first is the game of chess, which they call comican, and which has been known to them from time immemorial. The game of quechu, which they esteem highly, has a great affinity to that of backgammon, but instead of dice they make use of triangular pieces of...