Queen: Originally this piece was the king’s “counselor” ( mantri in Sanskrit). The Russians have stuck to the original “elephant” and call the piece slon. In his article Jacobs has very useful maps for each piece, like the following for the bishop (click to enlarge): It started off as the Sanskrit hasti, for elephant, changed to the Persian pil, the French fil, and finally fou, which translates to “fool”. The Italians call it alfiere (“standard bearer”), the Germany call it Läufer (runner), the Serbians lovac (hunter), Slovak strelec (gunner). Puzzlingly the piece is called “ship” (or “boat”) in some other languages, including Russian ( lad’já) and Armenian ( navak).īishop: this piece has the widest range of names. English stuck with rook, but invented "to castle" for the king-and-rook move. In many European languages the piece is known as a tower or a castle – e.g. Rook: it was called ratha (“chariot”) in Sanskrit, rukh in Persian. In this case the piece name tends to universally reflect this ability: cavallo in Spanish, springare in Swedish, Springer in German. It reflects the unique ability of the piece to jump over other pieces. Knight: in the original Chaturanga the piece was called asva, which is Sanskrit for “horse”. The Spanish term peon also means “farmer,” which is reflected in a number of Germanic languages, e.g. Pawns: the original Sanskrit padati, or “foot soldier”, came to us via the Latin pedester to modern French pion and English pawn. In his article How Did the Chess Pieces Get Their Names?, which appeared on April 21, 2023, Frank Jacobs meticulously traces the various piece names in different languages around the world. This is reflected more or less recognizably in the piece names. It includes this map, which you can click to enlarge.Ĭhaturanga is Sanskrit for “four-limbed”, referring to the four sections of the Indian army: infantry, cavalry, elephants and chariots. If you want to know more about the migration of the game around the world, you should read Frank Jacobs' 2017 article How Chess Went Global. And that, you will immediately recognize, is the origin of the modern term ‘checkmate’. The game was called chaturanga, and when it migrated to Persia (around 700 AD), it was called chatrang, which was derived from the players exclaiming “shāh māt!” (“the king is helpless or dead”). Still no ChessBase Account? learn more > The ultimate chess experience every day, Pla圜 welcomes 20,000 chess players from all around the world – from beginner to grandmaster.Ĭhess was invented in India during the sixth century.Memorize it easily move by move by playing against the variation trainer. Still no ChessBase Account? learn more > Learn openings the right way! Build and maintain your repertoire.Still no ChessBase Account? learn more > Real Fun against a Chess Program! Play, analyze and train online against Fritz.Top authors like Daniel King, Lawrence Trent and Rustam Kasimdzhanov Still no ChessBase Account? learn more > Thousands of hours of high class video training.Still no ChessBase Account? learn more > Sac, sac, mate! Solve tactical positions of your playing strength.Store your games, training material and opening repertoire in the cloud. Still no ChessBase Account? learn more > My Games – Access your games from everywhere.
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