Overview of the events of 1940 in chess
The below is a list of events in chess in the year 1940.
Chess events in brief
Tournaments
Hastings International Chess Congress won by Frank Parr , 1939/40.
Havana won by Isaac Kashdan ahead of Georges Koltanowski , January 1940.
Beverwijk (the 3rd Hoogovenschaaktoernoi ) won by Max Euwe , January 1940.
Warsaw (a prison tournament), won by Moishe Lowtzky ahead of Stanisław Kohn , January/February 1940.
Budapest (Maroczy Jubilaeum ) won by Euwe followed by Milan Vidmar , Gedeon Barcza , etc.
Amsterdam (VAS), won by Hans Kmoch followed by Adriaan de Groot , Salo Landau and Lodewijk Prins , etc.
Amsterdam (VVGA), won by Euwe ahead of Prins.
Baarn (Quadrangular ), won by Landau ahead of Euwe and Kmoch, and Haije Kramer .
Delft (Quadrangular ), won by Kmoch followed by Euwe, Johannes van den Bosch , and Landau.
Leeuwarden won jointly by Nicolaas Cortlever , Prins and Landau.
Rotterdam won by Euwe ahead of Vlagsma.
The Hague won by George Salto Fontein ahead of Arthur Wijnans .
Ghent (the Belgian Chess Championship ), won by Paul Devos .
Santiago de Cuba won by Koltanowski ahead of Diez.
Santiago de Chile (the Chilean Chess Championship ), won by Mariano Castillo .
Montevideo (the Uruguayan Chess Championship ), won by Arturo Liebstein .
Rio de Janeiro (Torneio Nacional de Selecao ), won by Walter Cruz , February/March 1940.
Buenos Aires (the 19th Argentine Chess Championship , Torneo Mayor ) won by Aristide Gromer followed by Franciszek Sulik , Carlos Guimard , etc.
Lvov (West Ukrainian championship), won by Abram Khavin , March 1940.
Rosario won by Gideon Ståhlberg .
Stockholm (unofficial Swedish Chess Championship ), won by Nils Bergkvist .
Randers (the Danish Chess Championship ), won by Jens Enevoldsen .
Güstrow won by Carl Ahues and Lachmann, start 20 March 1940.
London (Easter ) won by Harry Golombek and Paul List ahead of Vera Menchik-Stevenson , March 1940.
New York City (the 3rd U.S. Chess Championship ), won by Samuel Reshevsky , 27 April – 19 May 1940.
Bad Elster won by Karl Gilg and Ludwig Roedl , start 14 May 1940.
Berlin won by Efim Bogoljubow ahead of Kurt Richter , start 16 June 1940.
Berlin (the Berlin City Chess Championship ), won by Rudolf Palme , June 1940.
Posen won by Ahues and Elstner, July 1940.
Nice (the French Chess Championship ), won by Amédée Gibaud .
Sofia (the Bulgarian Chess Championship ), won by Oleg Neikirch and Alexander Tsvetkov .
Dublin (the Irish Chess Championship ), won by John O'Hanlon .
Montreal (the 44th Canadian Chess Championship ), won by Maurice Fox .
Ventnor City won by Milton Hanauer and Sidney Bernstein .
Dallas (the 41st U.S. Open ), won by Reuben Fine ahead of Herman Steiner , August 1940.
Bad Oeynhausen (the 7th German Chess Championship ), won by Georg Kieninger ahead of Paul Felix Schmidt , start 4 August 1940.
Rakovník (the Bohemia and Moravia Chess Championship ), won by Jan Foltys , 17–31 August 1940.
Lvov won by Edward Gerstenfeld ahead of Izaak Appel , August 1940.
Danzig won by Walter John ahead of Gustav Rogmann , September 1940.
Leningrad (Quadrangular ), won by Viacheslav Ragozin .
Leningrad (the 15th Leningrad City Chess Championship ) won by Ilya Rabinovich .
Kiev (USSR championship, semi-final), won by Gerstenfeld and Stolberg.
Moscow (the 12th USSR Chess Championship ), won jointly by Igor Bondarevsky and Andor Lilienthal , followed by Vasily Smyslov , Paul Keres , Isaac Boleslavsky and Mikhail Botvinnik , etc., 5 September – 3 October 1940.
Kiev (the 12th Ukrainian Chess Championship ), won by Boleslavsky ahead of David Bronstein .
Kraków /Krynica /Warsaw (the 1st General Government Chess Championship ), won by Bogoljubow and Anton Kohler , 3–17 November 1940.
Posen (Quadrangular ), won by Rogmann.
Prague (the Kautsky Memorial), won by Josef Dobiáš .
Melbourne (the Pietzcker Christmas Tournament), won by Lazare Suchowolski, December 1940.
Sydney (the New South Wales championship), won by Lajos Steiner followed by Gary Koshnitsky , Cecil Purdy , etc., 1940/41.
Matches
Paul Keres won against Max Euwe (7.5 : 6.5) in The Netherlands (various places) in 1939/40.[ 4]
Carlos Maderna defeated Luis Piazzini (8 : 6), Buenos Aires, Argentina (the 18th ARG-ch).
Walter Cruz beat Octavio Trompowsky (5.5 : 1.5), Rio de Janeiro, Brazil.
Georg Kieninger defeated Wilhelm Ernst (6 : 4), Cologne, Germany.
Georg Kieninger defeated Wilhelm Ernst (5.5 : 4.5), Gelsenkirchen, Germany.
Georg Kieninger beat Immo Engert (7.5 : 2.5), Düsseldorf, Germany.
Mikhail Botvinnik beat Viacheslav Ragozin (8.5 : 3.5), Leningrad, Russia.[ 5]
Grigory Levenfish won against Vladimir Alatortsev (8.5 : 5.5), Russia.[ 6]
Births
8 February – Boris Kogan , Russian/American IM
15 May – Carlos Bielicki , Argentine IM, 1959 World Junior Champion
2 June – István Csom in Satoraljaujhely, Hungarian GM
7 June – Liudmila Belavenets in Moscow, Russian ICCGM and Women's World Correspondence Champion 1984–1992
2 August – Adrian Hollis in Bristol, English ICCGM
8 August – Dragutin Sahovic in Kraljevo, Yugoslavian/Serbian GM
24 September – Renato Naranja , Filipino IM
26 September – Vladimir Savon in Chernihiv, Soviet/Ukrainian GM, USSR Champion in 1971
7 October – Liu Wenzhe , Chinese IM and trainer
10 November – Miodrag Todorcevic in Belgrade, Serbian/French GM and coach
19 December – Juzefs Petkēvičs , Latvian GM
Andrew Kalotay , Hungarian-born Canadian/American chess player
Deaths
ca. March - Dawid Przepiórka killed in a mass execution by the Nazis in Palmiry .
ca. March - Achilles Frydman killed in a mass execution in Palmiry.
ca. March - Stanisław Kohn killed in a mass execution in Palmiry.
ca. March - Moishe Lowtzky killed in a mass execution in Palmiry.
5 May - Willi Schlage died in Berlin, Germany.
4 July - Sammi Fajarowicz died in the Jewish Hospital in Leipzig (Leipziger Israelische Krankenhaus ) of tuberculosis. Fajarowicz Gambit .
18 July – Davide Marotti , winner of the first Italian Championship
11 September - Peter Fyfe died in Glasgow, Scotland. Fyfe Gambit.
30 November - Wilhelm Hilse died in Germany.
December - Walter John died in Berlin, Germany.
December - František Schubert died in the Protectorate of Bohemia and Moravia .
Moshe Hirschbein , Polish master, died by the Nazis.
Max Walter , Slovak master, died by the Nazis.
Arthur Kaufmann , Austrian master, died by the Nazis. Other sources give 1938 as the year of his death. He was a philosopher and ended his chess career in 1917. No philosophical works by him or photographs of him survive. His burial site was destroyed during the bombing of WWII.
Kalikst Morawski , Polish master, died probably in Siberia .
References
^ Tadeusz Wolsza, Arcymistrzowie, mistrzowie, amatorzy... Słownik biograficzny szachistów polskich , Wydawnictwo DiG, Warszawa 1995 (tom 1), 1996 (t.2), 1999 (t.3)
^ http://www.westlondonchess.com/node/134 Archived 2007-10-08 at the Wayback Machine British National Chess Centre
^ Hooper, David ; Whyld, Kenneth (1992), The Oxford Companion to Chess (2 ed.), Oxford University Press, pp. 297, 319, ISBN 0-19-280049-3
^ "Matches1930-49" . Archived from the original on 2007-11-12. Retrieved 2008-10-10 .
^ "Title Unknown" . Archived from the original on 2009-10-21.
^ "Title Unknown" . Archived from the original on 2009-10-21.
External links