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List of chess players
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This list of chess players includes people who are primarily known as chess players and have an article on the English Wikipedia.
A
[edit]- Jacob Aagaard (Denmark, Scotland, born 1973)
- Manuel Aaron (India, born 1935)
- Nijat Abasov (Azerbaijan, born 1995)
- István Abonyi (Hungary, 1886–1942)
- Gerald Abrahams (England, 1907–1980)
- Tatev Abrahamyan (Armenia, US, born 1988)
- Hasan Abbasifar (Iran, born 1972)
- Farid Abbasov (Azerbaijan, born 1979)
- Jude Acers (US, born 1944)
- Péter Ács (Hungary, born 1981)
- Weaver Adams (US, 1901–1963)
- Tanitoluwa Adewumi (Nigeria, US, born 2010)
- Utut Adianto (Indonesia, born 1965)
- András Adorján (Hungary, 1950–2023)
- Vladimir Afromeev (Russia, born 1954)
- Simen Agdestein (Norway, born 1967)
- Evgeny Agrest (Belarus, Sweden, born 1966)
- Georgy Agzamov (Uzbekistan, 1954–1986)
- Carl Ahues (Germany, 1883–1968)
- James Macrae Aitken (Scotland, 1908–1983)
- Ralf Åkesson (Sweden, born 1961)
- Anna Akhsharumova (Russia, US, born 1957)
- Varuzhan Akobian (Armenia, US, born 1983)
- Vladimir Akopian (Armenia, born 1971)
- Mohammed Al-Modiahki (Qatar, born 1974)
- Semyon Alapin (Lithuania, 1856–1923)
- Vladimir Alatortsev (Russia, 1909–1987)
- Adolf Albin (Romania, 1848–1920)
- Lev Alburt (Russia, US, born 1945)
- Alexander Alekhine (Russia, France 1892–1946)
- Alexei Alekhine (Russia, 1888–1939)
- Grace Alekhine (US, England, France 1876–1956)
- Aleksej Aleksandrov (Belarus, born 1973)
- Kirill Alekseenko (Russia, born 1997)
- Evgeny Alekseev (Russia, born 1985)
- Hugh Alexander (England, 1899–1974)
- Aaron Alexandre (Germany, France, England 1765–1850)
- Nana Alexandria (Georgia, born 1949)
- Johann Baptist Allgaier (Germany, Austria, 1763–1823)
- Zoltán Almási (Hungary, born 1976)
- Izak Aloni (Poland, Israel, 1905–1985)
- Yoel Aloni (Israel, 1937–2019)
- Boris Alterman (Israel, born 1970)
- Friedrich Amelung (Estonia, Latvia, 1842–1909)
- Bassem Amin (Egypt, born 1988)
- Farrukh Amonatov (Tajikistan, born 1978)
- Bruce Amos (Canada, born 1946)
- An Yangfeng (China, born 1963)
- Viswanathan Anand (India, born 1969)
- Erik Andersen (Denmark, 1904–1938)
- Frank Anderson (Canada, 1928–1980)
- Hope Arthurine Anderson (Jamaica, 1950–2016)
- Adolf Anderssen (Germany, 1818–1879)
- Ulf Andersson (Sweden, born 1951)
- Dmitry Andreikin (Russia, born 1990)
- Zaven Andriasian (Armenia, born 1989)
- Dejan Antić (Serbia, born 1968)
- Rogelio Antonio Jr. (Philippines, born 1962)
- Vladimir Antoshin (Russia, 1929–1994)
- Oskar Antze (Germany, 1878–1962)
- Manuel Apicella (France, born 1970)
- Izaak Appel (Poland, 1905–1941)
- Fricis Apšenieks (Latvia, 1894–1941)
- Lev Aptekar (Ukraine, New Zealand, born 1936)
- José Joaquín Araiza (Mexico, 1900–1971)
- Ketevan Arakhamia-Grant (Georgia, born 1968)
- Mehrdad Ardeshi (Iran, born 1979)
- Walter Arencibia (Cuba, born 1967)
- Alexander Areshchenko (Ukraine, born 1986)
- Keith Arkell (England, born 1961)
- Romanas Arlauskas (Lithuania, Australia, 1917–2009)
- Jón Árnason (Iceland, born 1960)
- Dagur Arngrímsson (Iceland, born 1987)
- Levon Aronian (Armenia, born 1982)
- Lev Aronin (Russia, 1920–1983)
- Vladislav Artemiev (Russia, born 1998)
- Andreas Ascharin (Estonia, Latvia, 1843–1896)
- Jacob Ascher (England, Canada, 1841–1912)
- Konstantin Aseev (Russia, 1960–2004)
- Maurice Ashley (Jamaica, US, born 1966)
- Karen Asrian (Armenia, 1980–2008)
- Bibisara Assaubayeva (Kazakhstan, Russia, born 2004)
- Abu Bakr bin Yahya al-Suli (Abbasid Caliphate, c.880–946)
- Lajos Asztalos (Austria-Hungary, Yugoslavia, Hungary, 1889–1956)
- Ekaterina Atalik (Russia, Turkey, born 1982)
- Suat Atalık (Turkey, born 1964)
- Henry Atkins (England, 1872–1955)
- Arnold Aurbach (Poland, France, c.1888–1952)
- Yuri Averbakh (Russia, c.1922–2022)
- Valeriy Aveskulov (Ukraine, born 1986)
- Herbert Avram (US, 1913–2006)
- Boris Avrukh (Israel, born 1978)
B
[edit]- Alexander Baburin (Russia, Ireland, born 1967)
- Étienne Bacrot (France, born 1983)
- Paul Baender (Germany, Bolivia, 1906–1985)
- Giorgi Bagaturov (Georgia, born 1964)
- Amir Bagheri (Iran, born 1978)
- Camilla Baginskaite (Soviet Union, Lithuania, US, born 1967)
- Vladimir Bagirov (USSR, Latvia, 1936–2000)
- Mary Bain (US, 1904–1972)
- David Graham Baird (US, 1854–1913)
- Vladimir Baklan (Ukraine, born 1978)
- Yuri Balashov (Russia, born 1949)
- Rosendo Balinas Jr. (Philippines, 1941–1998)
- Zoltán von Balla (Hungary, 1883–1945)
- Csaba Balogh (Hungary, born 1987)
- János Balogh (Romania, Hungary, 1892–1980)
- Julio Balparda (Uruguay, c. 1900–1942)
- Amikam Balshan (Israel, born 1948)
- Hristos Banikas (Greece, born 1978)
- Anatoly Bannik (Ukraine, 1921–2013)
- David Baramidze (Georgia, Germany, born 1988)
- Zsigmond Barász (Hungary, 1878–1935)
- Abraham Baratz (Romania, France, 1895–1975)
- Gerardo Barbero (Argentina, Hungary, 1961–2001)
- Oliver Barbosa (Philippines, born 1986)
- Gedeon Barcza (Hungary, 1911–1986)
- Olaf Barda (Norway, 1909–1971)
- Curt von Bardeleben (Germany, 1861–1924)
- Leonard Barden (England, born 1929)
- Evgeny Bareev (Russia, born 1966)
- Robert Henry Barnes (England, New Zealand 1849–1916)
- Thomas Wilson Barnes (England, 1825–1874)
- Alexei Barsov (Uzbekistan, born 1966)
- Mateusz Bartel (Poland, born 1985)
- John Bartholomew (US, born 1986)
- Dibyendu Barua (India, born 1966)
- Cerdas Barus (Indonesia, born 1961)
- Michael Basman (England, born 1946)
- Christian Bauer (France, born 1977)
- Johann Hermann Bauer (Bohemia, Austria, 1861–1891)
- Friedrich Baumbach (Germany, 1935–2025)
- Albert Becker (Austria, Germany, Argentina 1896–1984)
- Anjelina Belakovskaia (Ukraine, US, born 1969)
- Liudmila Belavenets (Russia, 1940–2021)
- Sergey Belavenets (Russia, 1910–1942)
- Dina Belenkaya (Russia, Israel, born 1993)
- Alexander Beliavsky (Ukraine, Slovenia, born 1953)
- Slim Belkhodja (Tunisia, born 1962)
- Jana Bellin (Czechoslovakia, England, born 1947)
- Zdzisław Belsitzmann (Poland, c. 1890–1920)
- Levi Benima (Netherlands, 1837–1922)
- Clarice Benini (Italy, 1905–1976)
- Joel Benjamin (US, born 1964)
- Francisco Benkö (Germany, Argentina, 1910–2010)
- Pal Benko (France, Hungary, US, 1928–2019)
- Dávid Bérczes (Hungary, born 1990)
- Emanuel Berg (Sweden, born 1981)
- Béla Berger (Hungary, Australia, 1931–2005)
- Johann Berger (Austria, 1845–1933)
- Victor Buerger (Ukraine, England, 1904–1996)
- Nils Bergkvist (Sweden, 1900–?)
- Teodors Bergs (Latvia, 1902–1966)
- Hans Berliner (Germany, US, 1929–2017)
- Ivar Bern (Norway, born 1967)
- Karl Berndtsson (Sweden, 1892–1943)
- Jacob Bernstein (US, ?–1958)
- Ossip Bernstein (Ukraine, France, 1882–1962)
- Sidney Norman Bernstein (US, 1911–1992)
- Mario Bertok (Croatia, 1929–2008)
- Katarina Beskow (Sweden, 1867–1939)
- Louis Betbeder Matibet (France, 1901–1986)
- Kārlis Bētiņš (Latvia, 1867–1943)
- Siegmund Beutum (Austria, 1890–1966)
- Vinay Bhat (US, born 1984)
- Carlos Bielicki (Argentina, born 1940)
- Martin Bier (Germany, 1854–1934)
- Horace Bigelow (US, 1898–1980)
- István Bilek (Hungary, 1932–2010)
- Paul Rudolf von Bilguer (Germany, 1815–1840)
- Maurice Billecard (France, 1876–?)
- Reefat Bin-Sattar (Bangladesh, born 1974)
- Henry Bird (England, 1830–1908)
- Nathan Birnboim (Israel, born 1950)
- Klaus Bischoff (Germany, born 1961)
- Arthur Bisguier (US, 1929–2017)
- Peter Biyiasas (Greece, Canada, born 1950)
- Dimitrije Bjelica (Serbia, born 1935)
- Roy Turnbull Black (US, 1888–1962)
- Joseph Henry Blackburne (England, 1841–1924)
- Armand Blackmar (US, 1826–1888)
- Joseph Henry Blake (England, 1859–1951)
- Abram Blass (Poland, Israel, 1895–1971)
- Ottó Bláthy (Hungary, 1860–1939)
- Max Blau (Germany, Switzerland, 1918–1984)
- Ludwig Bledow (Germany, 1795–1846)
- Paweł Blehm (Poland, born 1980)
- Dirk Bleijkmans (Netherlands, Indonesia, 1875–?)
- Yaacov Bleiman (Lithuania, Israel, 1947–2004)
- Calvin Blocker (US, born 1955)
- Claude Bloodgood (US, 1937–2001)
- Oscar Blum (Lithuania, France, born before 1910)
- Benjamin Blumenfeld (Belarus, Russia, 1884–1947)
- Max Blümich (Germany, 1886–1942)
- Boris Blumin (Russia, Canada, US, 1907–1998)
- Milko Bobotsov (Bulgaria, 1931–2000)
- Dmitry Bocharov (Russia, born 1982)
- Samuel Boden (England, 1826–1882)
- Fedor Bogatyrchuk (Ukraine, Canada, 1892–1984)
- Efim Bogoljubow (Ukraine, Germany, 1889–1952)
- Paolo Boi (Italy, 1528–1598)
- Jacobo Bolbochán (Argentina, 1906–1984)
- Julio Bolbochán (Argentina, 1920–1996)
- Isaac Boleslavsky (Ukraine, Russia, Belarus, 1919–1977)
- Victor Bologan (Moldova, born 1971)
- Igor Bondarevsky (Russia, 1913–1979)
- Eero Böök (Finland, 1910–1990)
- Valentina Borisenko (Russia, 1920–1993)
- Olexandr Bortnyk (Ukraine, born 1996)
- Alexandra Botez (US, Canada, born 1995)
- Andrea Botez (US, Canada, born 2002)
- Tea Bosboom-Lanchava (Netherlands, Georgia, born 1974)
- George Botterill (England, Wales, born 1949)
- Mikhail Botvinnik (Russia, 1911–1995)
- Louis-Charles Mahé de La Bourdonnais (France, 1795–1840)
- César Boutteville (Vietnam, France, 1917–2015)
- Olena Boytsun (Ukraine, born 1983)
- Julius Brach (Czechoslovakia, 1881–1938)
- Gyula Breyer (Hungary, 1893–1921)
- Alfred Brinckmann (Germany, 1891–1967)
- Mirko Bröder (Hungary, Serbia, 1911–1943)
- Miklós Bródy (Hungary, Romania, 1877–1949)
- Vladimir Bron (Ukraine, 1909–1985)
- David Bronstein (Ukraine, 1924–2006)
- Walter Browne (Australia, US, 1949–2015)
- Agnieszka Brustman (Poland, born 1962)
- Lázaro Bruzón (Cuba, born 1982)
- Stellan Brynell (Sweden, born 1962)
- Bu Xiangzhi (China, born 1985)
- Henry Thomas Buckle (England, 1821–1862)
- Gerardo Budowski (Germany, France, Venezuela, Costa Rica, 1925–2014)
- Wincenty Budzyński (Poland, France, 1815–1866)
- Nataliya Buksa (Ukraine, born 1996)
- Constant Ferdinand Burille (France, US, 1866–1914)
- Amos Burn (England, 1848–1925)
- Algimantas Butnorius (Lithuania, 1946–2017)
- Elisabeth Bykova (Russia, 1913–1989)
- Donald Byrne (US, 1930–1976)
- Robert Byrne (US, 1928–2013)
- Bhupendra Niraula (Nepal, 1981)
C
[edit]- Kler Çaku (Albania, born 2010)
- Florencio Campomanes (Philippines, 1927–2010)
- Daniel Cámpora (Argentina, born 1957)
- Esteban Canal (Peru, Italy, 1896–1981)
- Arianne Caoili (Australia, 1986–2020)
- José Raúl Capablanca (Cuba, 1888–1942)
- Rodolfo Tan Cardoso (Philippines, 1937–2013)
- Ruth Cardoso (Brazil, 1934–2000)
- Carl Carls (Germany, 1880–1958)
- Magnus Carlsen (Norway, born 1990)
- Pontus Carlsson (Sweden, born 1982)
- Horatio Caro (England, Germany, 1862–1920)
- Berna Carrasco (Chile, 1914–2013)
- Pietro Carrera (Sicily, 1573–1647)
- Fabiano Caruana (Dual citizenship: US and Italy, born 1992)
- Vincenzo Castaldi (Italy, 1916–1970)
- Mariano Castillo (Chile, 1905–1970)
- Mišo Cebalo (Croatia, born 1945)
- Giovanni Cenni (Italy, 1881–1957)
- Alfonso Ceron (Spain, 1535–?)
- Oscar Chajes (Ukraine, Austria, US, 1873–1928)
- Ferenc Chalupetzky (Hungary, 1886–1951)
- Edward Chamier (England, France, 1840–1892)
- Chan Peng Kong (Singapore, born 1956)
- Sandipan Chanda (India, born 1983)
- Chang Tung Lo (China, born before 1960)
- Murray Chandler (New Zealand, England, born 1960)
- Pascal Charbonneau (Canada, born 1983)
- Rudolf Charousek (Hungary, 1873–1900)
- Chantal Chaudé de Silans (France, 1919–2001)
- Valery Chekhov (Russia, born 1955)
- Vitaly Chekhover (Russia, 1908–1965)
- Chen De (China, born 1949)
- Ivan Cheparinov (Bulgaria, born 1986)
- Alexander Cherepkov (Russia, 1920–2009)
- Irving Chernev (Russia, US, 1900–1981)
- Tykhon Cherniaiev (Ukraine, born 2010)
- Alexander Chernin (Ukraine, Hungary, born 1960)
- Konstantin Chernyshov (Russia, born 1967)
- André Chéron (France, 1895–1980)
- Maia Chiburdanidze (Georgia, born 1961)
- Mikhail Chigorin (Russia, 1850–1908)
- Larry Christiansen (US, born 1956)
- Vladimir Chuchelov (Russia, Belgium, born 1969)
- Slavko Cicak (Montenegro, Sweden, born 1969)
- Roberto Cifuentes (Chile, Netherlands, Spain, born 1957)
- Victor Ciocâltea (Romania, 1932–1983)
- Hermann Clemenz (Estonia, 1846–1908)
- Albert Clerc (France, 1830–1918)
- Viktorija Čmilytė (Lithuania, born 1983)
- John Cochrane (England, 1798–1878)
- Erich Cohn (Germany, 1884–1918)
- Wilhelm Cohn (Germany, 1859–1913)
- Edgard Colle (Belgium, 1897–1932)
- John W. Collins (US, 1912–2001)
- Eugene Ernest Colman (England, 1878–1964)
- Camila Colombo (Uruguay, born 1990)
- Adrián García Conde (Mexico, England, 1886–1943)
- Stuart Conquest (England, born 1967)
- Anya Corke (England, Hong Kong, born 1990)
- Nicolaas Cortlever (Netherlands, 1915–1995)
- Juan Corzo (Cuba, 1873–1941)
- Carlo Cozio (Italy, c. 1715 – c. 1780)
- Spencer Crakanthorp (Australia, 1885–1936)
- Anna Cramling (Spain, Sweden, born 2002)
- Pia Cramling (Sweden, born 1963)
- Robert Crépeaux (France, 1900–1994)
- Walter Cruz (Brazil, 1910–1967)
- István Csom (Hungary, 1940–2021)
- Miguel Cuéllar (Colombia, 1916–1985)
- Josef Cukierman (Poland, France, 1900–1941)
- John Curdo (US, 1931–2022)
- Ognjen Cvitan (Croatia, born 1961)
- Hieronim Czarnowski (Poland, France, Austria-Hungary, 1834–1902)
- Moshe Czerniak (Poland, Israel, 1910–1984)
D
[edit]- Arthur Dake (US, 1910–2000)
- Pedro Damiano (Portugal, 1480–1544)
- Mato Damjanović (Croatia, 1927–2011)
- Gösta Danielsson (Sweden, 1912–1978)
- Silvio Danailov (Bulgaria, born 1961)
- A. Polak Daniels (Netherlands, before 1855–after 1883)
- Dawid Daniuszewski (Poland, 1885–1944)
- Klaus Darga (Germany, born 1934)
- Alberto David (Luxembourg, born 1970)
- Jacques Davidson (Netherlands, 1890–1961)
- Nigel Davies (England, born 1960)
- Boris de Greiff (Colombia, 1930–2011)
- Bogdan-Daniel Deac (Romania, born 2001)
- Frederick Deacon (Belgium, 1829–1875)
- Chakkravarthy Deepan (India, born 1987)
- Nick de Firmian (US, born 1957)
- Marigje Degrande (Belgium, born 1992)
- Aleksander Delchev (Bulgaria, born 1971)
- Eugene Delmar (US, 1841–1909)
- Yelena Dembo (Russia, Israel, Hungary, Greece, born 1983)
- Arnold Denker (US, 1914–2005)
- Erald Dervishi (Albania, 1979)
- Alexandre Deschapelles (France, 1780–1847)
- Andrei Deviatkin (Russia, born 1980)
- Paul Devos (Belgium, 1911–1981)
- André Diamant (Brazil, born 1990)
- Alvaro Dias Huizar (Venezuela, born 1980)
- Emil Josef Diemer (Germany, 1908–1990)
- Mark Diesen (US, 1957–2008)
- Julius Dimer (Germany, 1871–1945)
- Ding Liren (China, born 1992)
- Nathan Divinsky (Canada, 1925–2012)
- Rune Djurhuus (Norway, born 1970)
- Maxim Dlugy (Russia, US, born 1966)
- Josef Dobiáš (Bohemia, Czechoslovakia, 1886–1981)
- Yosef Dobkin (Russia, Israel, 1909–1977)
- Stefan Docx (Belgium, born 1974)
- Yury Dokhoian (Russia, 1964–2021)
- Sergey Dolmatov (Russia, born 1959)
- Lenier Dominguez (Cuba, born 1983)
- Józef Dominik (Poland, 1894–1920)
- Zadok Domnitz (Israel, born 1933)
- Elena Donaldson (Russia, Georgia, US, 1957–2012)
- John W. Donaldson (US, born 1958)
- Ivo Donev (Austria, born 1959)
- Jan Hein Donner (Netherlands, 1927–1988)
- Iossif Dorfman (Ukraine, France, born 1952)
- Alexey Dreev (Russia, born 1969)
- Leonids Dreibergs (Latvia, US, 1908–1969)
- Kurt Dreyer (Germany, South Africa, 1909–1981)
- Tihomil Drezga (Croatia, US, 1903–1981)
- Yuri Drozdovskij (Ukraine, born 1984)
- Leroy Dubeck (US, born 1939)
- Serafino Dubois (Italy, 1817–1899)
- Daniil Dubov (Russia, born 1996)
- Andreas Dückstein (Hungary, Austria, born 1927)
- Jan-Krzysztof Duda (Poland, born 1998)
- Jean Dufresne (Germany, 1829–1893)
- Andreas Duhm (Germany, Switzerland, 1883–1975)
- Dietrich Duhm (Germany, Switzerland, 1880–1954)
- Hans Duhm (Germany, Switzerland, 1878–1946)
- Arthur Dunkelblum (Poland, Belgium, 1906–1979)
- Oldřich Duras (Bohemia, Czechoslovakia, 1882–1957)
- Fyodor Duz-Khotimirsky (Ukraine, 1879–1965)
- Mark Dvoretsky (Russia, 1947–2016)
- Joanna Dworakowska (Poland, born 1978)
- Eduard Dyckhoff (Germany, 1880–1949)
- Viacheslav Dydyshko (Belarus, born 1949)
- Boruch Israel Dyner (Poland, Belgium, Israel, 1903–1979)
- Semen Dvoirys (Russia, born 1958)
- Nana Dzagnidze (Georgia, born 1987)
- Roman Dzindzichashvili (Georgia, Israel, US, born 1944)
- Marat Dzhumaev (Uzbekistan, born 1976)
E
[edit]- James Eade (US, born 1957)
- Zahar Efimenko (Ukraine, born 1985)
- Marsel Efroimski (Israel, born 1995)
- Jaan Ehlvest (Estonia, born 1962)
- Louis Eichborn (Germany, 1812–1882)
- Rakhil Eidelson (Belarus, born 1958)
- Vereslav Eingorn (Ukraine, born 1956)
- Louis Eisenberg (Ukraine, US, 1876–after 1909)
- Bengt Ekenberg (Sweden, 1912–1986)
- Folke Ekström (Sweden, 1906–2000)
- Erich Eliskases (Austria, Germany, Argentina, 1913–1997)
- Pavel Eljanov (Ukraine, born 1983)
- Moissei Eljaschoff (Lithuania, 1870–1919)
- John Emms (England, born 1967)
- Peter Enders (Germany, 1963–2025)
- Lūcijs Endzelīns (Estonia, Latvia, Australia, 1909–1981)
- Jens Enevoldsen (Denmark, 1907–1980)
- Ludwig Engels (Germany, Brazil, 1905–1967)
- Berthold Englisch (Austria, 1851–1897)
- Thomas Engqvist (Sweden, born 1963)
- David Enoch (Israel, 1901–1949)
- Vladimir Epishin (Russia, born 1965)
- Stefan Erdélyi (Hungary, Romania, 1905–1968)
- Hanna Ereńska (Poland, born 1946)
- Arjun Erigaisi (India, born 2003)
- Evgenij Ermenkov (Bulgaria, Palestine, born 1949)
- Wilhelm Ernst (Germany, 1905–1952)
- John Angus Erskine (New Zealand, Australia, 1873–1960)
- Andrey Esipenko (Russia, born 2002)
- Yakov Estrin (Russia, 1923–1987)
- Max Euwe (Netherlands, 1901–1981)
- Larry M. Evans (US, 1932–2010)
- William Davies Evans (Wales, 1790–1872)
- Alexander Evensohn (Ukraine, 1892–1919)
- Győző Exner (Hungary, 1864–1945)
F
[edit]- Samuel Factor (Poland, US, 1883–1949)
- Louisa Matilda Fagan (Italy, England, 1850–1931)
- Hugo Fähndrich (Hungary, Austria, 1851–1930)
- Hans Fahrni (Bohemia, Switzerland, 1874–1939)
- William Fairhurst (England, Scotland, New Zealand, 1903–1982)
- Sammi Fajarowicz (Germany, 1908–1940)
- Raphael Falk (Russia, 1856–1913)
- Ernst Falkbeer (Austria-Hungary, 1819–1885)
- Stefan Fazekas (Hungary, Czechoslovakia, England, 1898–1967)
- Sergey Fedorchuk (Ukraine, born 1981)
- Alexei Fedorov (Belarus, born 1972)
- John Fedorowicz (US, born 1958)
- Vladimir Fedoseev (Russia, born 1995)
- Movsas Feigins (Latvia, Argentina, 1908–1950)
- Rafał Feinmesser (Poland, born before 1906)
- Florin Felecan (Romania, US, born 1980)
- Virgilio Fenoglio (Argentina, 1902–1990)
- Arthur Feuerstein (US, born 1935)
- Alexandr Fier (Brazil, born 1988)
- Martha Fierro (Ecuador, born 1977)
- Miroslav Filip (Czech Republic, 1928–2009)
- Anton Filippov (Uzbekistan, born 1986)
- Reuben Fine (US, 1914–1993)
- Ben Finegold (US, born 1969)
- Julius Finn (Poland, US, 1871–1931)
- Nick de Firmian (US, born 1957)
- Alireza Firouzja (Iran, France, born 2003)
- Robert James Fischer (US, Iceland, 1943–2008)
- Alex Fishbein (US, born 1968)
- Alexander Flamberg (Poland, 1880–1926)
- Alfred Flatow (Germany, Australia, born 1937)
- Glenn Flear (England, born 1959)
- Ernst Flechsig (Germany, 1852–1890)
- Bernhard Fleissig (Hungary, Austria, 1853–1931)
- Max Fleissig (Hungary, Austria, 1845–after 1882)
- János Flesch (Hungary, 1933–1983)
- Salo Flohr (Ukraine, Czechoslovakia, Russia, 1908–1983)
- Rodrigo Flores (Chile, 1913–2007)
- Alberto Foguelman (Argentina, 1923–2013)
- Jan Foltys (Czechoslovakia, 1908–1952)
- George Salto Fontein (Netherlands, 1890–1963)
- Leó Forgács (Hungary, 1881–1930)
- Győző Forintos (Hungary, 1935–2018)
- Albert Fox (US, 1881–1964)
- Maurice Fox (Ukraine, Canada, 1898–1988)
- Selim Franklin (England, US, 1814–1884)
- Zenon Franco (Paraguay, born 1956)
- Laurent Fressinet (France, born 1981)
- Sergey von Freymann (Russia, Uzbekistan, 1882–1946)
- Joel Fridlizius (Sweden, 1869–1963)
- Daniel Fridman (Latvia, Germany, born 1976)
- Frederic Friedel (Germany, born 1945)
- Gunnar Friedemann (Estonia, 1909–1943)
- David Friedgood (South Africa, England, born 1946)
- Henryk Friedman (Poland, 1903–1942)
- Alexander Fritz (Germany, 1857–1932)
- Martin Severin From (Denmark, 1828–1895)
- Achilles Frydman (Poland, 1905–1940)
- Paulino Frydman (Poland, Argentina, 1905–1982)
- Ľubomír Ftáčnik (Czechoslovakia, Slovakia, born 1957)
- Andrija Fuderer (Vojvodina, Belgium, 1931–2011)
- Semyon Furman (Russia, 1920–1978)
- Ivana Maria Furtado (India, born 1999)
- Géza Füster (Hungary, Canada, 1910–1990)
- Roy Fyllingen (Norway, born 1975)
G
[edit]- Merab Gagunashvili (Georgia, born 1985)
- Aleksandr Galkin (Russia, born 1979)
- Joseph Gallagher (England, Switzerland, born 1964)
- Alisa Galliamova (Russia, born 1972)
- Surya Shekhar Ganguly (India, born 1983)
- Nona Gaprindashvili (Georgia, born 1941)
- Valeriane Gaprindashvili (Georgia, born 1982)
- Carlos Garcia Palermo (Argentina, Italy, born 1953)
- Raimundo García (Argentina, 1936–2020)
- Timur Gareev (Uzbekistan, born 1988)
- Eldar Gasanov (Ukraine, born 1982)
- Vugar Gashimov (Azerbaijan, 1986–2014)
- Anna Gasik (Poland, born 1988)
- Einar Gausel (Norway, born 1963)
- Viktor Gavrikov (Lithuania, Switzerland, 1957–2016)
- Tamaz Gelashvili (Georgia, born 1978)
- Boris Gelfand (Belarus, Israel, born 1968)
- Efim Geller (Ukraine, 1925–1998)
- Uzi Geller (Israel, born 1931)
- Petar Genov (Bulgaria, born 1970)
- Kiril Georgiev (Bulgaria, born 1965)
- Krum Georgiev (Bulgaria, born 1958)
- Ernő Gereben (Hungary, Switzerland 1907–1988)
- Regina Gerlecka (Poland, 1913–1983)
- Eugênio German (Brazil, 1930–2001)
- Theodor Germann (Latvia, 1879–1935)
- Alik Gershon (Israel, born 1980)
- Edward Gerstenfeld (Poland, Ukraine 1915–1943)
- Georgy Geshev (Bulgaria, 1903–1937)
- Ehsan Ghaem Maghami (Iran, born 1982)
- Tigran Gharamian (France, born 1984)
- Ameet Ghasi (England, born 1987)
- Florin Gheorghiu (Romania, born 1944)
- Amédée Gibaud (France, 1885–1957)
- Johannes Giersing (Denmark, 1872–1954)
- Ellen Gilbert (US, 1837–1900)
- Jessie Gilbert (England, 1987–2006)
- Karl Gilg (Czechoslovakia, Germany, 1901–1981)
- Aivars Gipslis (Latvia, 1937–2000)
- Anish Giri (Netherlands, born 1994)
- Matteo Gladig (Italy, 1880–1915)
- Eduard Glass (Austria, 1902–after 1980)
- Evgeny Gleizerov (Russia, born 1963)
- Igor Glek (Russia, Germany, born 1961)
- Svetozar Gligorić (Serbia, 1923–2012)
- Fernand Gobet (Switzerland, born 1962)
- Michele Godena (Italy, born 1967)
- Carl Goering (Germany, 1841–1879)
- Alphonse Goetz (France, 1865–1934)
- Leonid Gofshtein (Israel, 1953–2015)
- Jason Goh Koon-Jong (Singapore, born 1989)
- Goh Weiming (Singapore, born 1983)
- Samuel Gold (Hungary, Austria, US, 1835–1920)
- Alexander Goldin (Russia, born 1964)
- Rusudan Goletiani (Georgia, US, born 1980)
- Celso Golmayo Torriente (Cuba, Spain, 1879–1924)
- Celso Golmayo Zúpide (Spain, Cuba, 1820–1898)
- Manuel Golmayo Torriente (Cuba, Spain, 1883–1973)
- Vitali Golod (Ukraine, Israel born 1971)
- Harry Golombek (England, 1911–1995)
- Alexander Goloshchapov (Ukraine, born 1978)
- Alexander Ferdinand von der Goltz (Germany, 1819–1858)
- Valentina Golubenko (Estonia, Croatia, born 1990)
- Mikhail Golubev (Ukraine, born 1970)
- Aleksei Goncharov (Russia, 1879–1913)
- Gong Qianyun (China, born 1985)
- Jayson Gonzales (Philippines, born 1969)
- José González García (Mexico, born 1973)
- Juan Carlos González Zamora (Mexico, born 1968)
- David S. Goodman (England, US, born 1958)
- Stephen J. Gordon (England, born 1986)
- Danny Gormally (England, born 1976)
- Aleksandra Goryachkina (Russia, born 1998)
- George H. D. Gossip (US, England, 1841–1907)
- Solomon Gotthilf (Russia, 1903–1967)
- Hermann von Gottschall (Germany, 1862–1933)
- Boris Grachev (Russia, born 1986)
- Alexander Graf (Uzbekistan, Germany, born 1962)
- Sonja Graf (Germany, Argentina, US, 1908–1965)
- Julio Granda Zuniga (Peru, born 1967)
- Roberto Grau (Argentina, 1900–1944)
- Gioachino Greco (Italy, 1600 – c. 1634)
- Ewen McGowen Green (New Zealand, born 1950)
- Alon Greenfeld (US, Israel, born 1964)
- John Grefe (US, 1947–2013)
- Bernhard Gregory (Estonia, Germany, 1879–1939)
- Gisela Kahn Gresser (US, 1906–2000)
- Helgi Grétarsson (Iceland, born 1977)
- Richard Griffith (England, 1872–1955)
- Nikolay Grigoriev (Russia, 1895–1935)
- Avetik Grigoryan (Armenia, born 1989)
- Vincent Grimm (Austria, Hungary, 1800–1872)
- Alexander Grischuk (Russia, born 1983)
- Efstratios Grivas (Greece, born 1966)
- Henri Grob (Switzerland, 1904–1974)
- Aristide Gromer (France, 1908–1966)
- Adriaan de Groot (Netherlands, 1914–2006)
- Ernst Grünfeld (Austria, 1893–1962)
- Yehuda Gruenfeld (Poland, Israel, born 1956)
- James Grundy (England, US, 1855–1919)
- Izaak Grynfeld (Poland, Israel, born 1920)
- Gu Xiaobing (China, born 1985)
- Ion Gudju (Romania, 1897–1988)
- Eduard Gufeld (Ukraine, US, 1936–2002)
- Ilse Guggenberger (Colombia, born 1942)
- Carlos Guimard (Argentina, 1913–1998)
- Vidit Gujrathi (India, born 1994)
- Boris Gulko (Russia, US, born 1947)
- Gunnar Gundersen (France, Norway, Australia, 1882–1943)
- Isidor Gunsberg (Hungary, England, 1854–1930)
- Abhijeet Gupta (India, born 1989)
- Dmitry Gurevich (Russia, US, born 1956)
- Ilya Gurevich (Ukraine, US, born 1972)
- Mikhail Gurevich (Ukraine, Belgium, Turkey, born 1959)
- Bukhuti Gurgenidze (Georgia, 1933–2008)
- Jan Gustafsson (Germany, born 1979)
- Emanuel Guthi (Israel, born 1938)
- Lev Gutman (Latvia, Israel, Germany, born 1945)
- Fritz Gygli (Switzerland, 1896–1980)
- Alfred William Gyles (New Zealand, 1888–1967)
H
[edit]- Anna Hahn (Latvia, US, born 1976)
- Vitaly Halberstadt (Ukraine, France, 1903–1967)
- Alexander Halprin (Russia, Austria, 1868–1921)
- Tunç Hamarat (Turkey, Austria, born 1946)
- Hichem Hamdouchi (Morocco, born 1972)
- Rani Hamid (Bangladesh, born 1944)
- Jon Ludvig Hammer (Norway, born 1990)
- Carl Hamppe (Switzerland, Austria, 1814–1876)
- Milton Hanauer (US, 1908–1988)
- James Hanham (US, 1840–1923)
- Hermann von Hanneken (Germany, 1810–1886)
- Curt Hansen (Denmark, born 1964)
- Wilhelm Hanstein (Germany, 1811–1850)
- Khosro Harandi (Iran, 1950–2019)
- Dronavalli Harika (India, born 1991)
- Pendyala Harikrishna (India, born 1986)
- Max Harmonist (Germany, 1864–1907)
- Daniel Harrwitz (Germany, France, 1823–1884)
- William Hartston (England, born 1947)
- Wolfgang Hasenfuss (Latvia, 1900–1944)
- Stewart Haslinger (England, born 1981)
- Arnaud Hauchard (France, born 1971)
- Cécile Haussernot (France, born 1998)
- Kornél Havasi (Hungary, 1892–1945)
- Jonathan Hawkins (England, born 1983)
- Mark Hebden (England, born 1958)
- Bartłomiej Heberla (Poland, born 1985)
- Jean Hébert (Canada, born 1957)
- Hans-Joachim Hecht (Germany, born 1939)
- Jonny Hector (Sweden, born 1964)
- Fenny Heemskerk (Netherlands, 1919–2007)
- Wolfgang Heidenfeld (Germany, South Africa, Ireland, 1911–1981)
- Jakub Heilpern (Poland, 1850–1910)
- Herbert Heinicke (Brazil, Germany, 1905–1988)
- Arved Heinrichsen (Lithuania, 1879–1900)
- Dan Heisman (US, born 1950)
- Grigory Helbach (Russia, 1863–1930)
- Karl Helling (Germany, 1904–1937)
- Johan Hellsten (Sweden, born 1975)
- Hermann Helms (US, 1870–1963)
- Ron Henley (US, born 1956)
- Moriz Henneberger (Switzerland, 1878–1959)
- Walter Henneberger (Switzerland, 1883–1969)
- Deen Hergott (Canada, born 1962)
- Sigmund Herland (Romania, 1865–1954)
- Róża Herman (Poland, 1902–1995)
- Gilberto Hernández Guerrero (Mexico, born 1970)
- Robert Hess (US, born 1991)
- Tiger Hillarp Persson (Sweden, born 1970)
- Wilhelm Hilse (Germany, 1878–1940)
- Moshe Hirschbein (Poland, 1894–1940)
- Moses Hirschel (Germany, 1754 – c. 1823)
- Philipp Hirschfeld (Germany, 1840–1896)
- Jóhann Hjartarson (Iceland, born 1963)
- Hoang Thanh Trang (Vietnam, Hungary, born 1980)
- Albert Hodges (US, 1861–1944)
- Julian Hodgson (England, born 1963)
- Leopold Hoffer (Hungary, France, England, 1842–1913)
- Karl Holländer (Germany, 1868–? )
- Edith Holloway (England, 1868–1956)
- Krystyna Hołuj-Radzikowska (Poland, 1931–2006)
- Walther von Holzhausen (Austria, Germany, 1876–1935)
- Baldur Hönlinger (Austria, Germany, 1905–1990)
- Bill Hook (US, British Virgin Islands, 1925–2010)
- Vlastimil Hort (Czechoslovakia, Germany, born 1944)
- Israel Horowitz (US, 1907–1973)
- Bernhard Horwitz (Germany, England, 1807–1885)
- Henry Hosmer (US, 1837–1892)
- Enamul Hossain (Bangladesh, born 1981)
- Hou Yifan (China, born 1994)
- Jovanka Houska (England, born 1980)
- Clarence Howell (US, 1881–1936)
- David Howell (England, born 1990)
- James Howell (England, born 1967)
- Zbyněk Hráček (Czech Republic, born 1970)
- Karel Hromádka (Bohemia, Czechoslovakia, 1887–1956)
- Vincenz Hruby (Bohemia, Austria, Italy, 1856–1917)
- Hsu Li Yang (Singapore, born 1972)
- Huang Qian (China, born 1986)
- Robert Hübner (Germany, 1948–2025)
- Werner Hug (Switzerland, born 1952)
- Krunoslav Hulak (Croatia, 1951–2015)
- Koneru Humpy (India, born 1987)
- Harriet Hunt (England, born 1978)
- Niclas Huschenbeth (Germany, born 1992)
- Alexander Huzman (Ukraine, Israel, born 1962)
I
[edit]- Ildar Ibragimov (Russia, US, born 1967)
- Bella Igla (Russia, Israel, born 1985)
- Juan Iliesco (Romania, Argentina, 1898–1968)
- Rolando Illa (US, Cuba, Argentina, 1880–1937)
- Miguel Illescas Córdoba (Spain, born 1965)
- Alexander Ilyin-Zhenevsky (Russia, 1894–1941)
- Ernesto Inarkiev (Kyrgyzstan, Russia, born 1985)
- Viorel Iordăchescu (Moldova, born 1977)
- Nana Ioseliani (Georgia, born 1962)
- Alexander Ipatov (Ukraine, Spain, Turkey, born 1993)
- Andrei Istrățescu (Romania, born 1975)
- Eduardo Iturrizaga (Venezuela, Spain, born 1989)
- Saidali Iuldachev (Uzbekistan, born 1968)
- Vasyl Ivanchuk (Ukraine, born 1969)
- Ivan Ivanišević (Serbia, born 1977)
- Alexander Ivanov (US, born 1956)
- Igor Ivanov (Russia, Canada, US, 1947–2005)
- Božidar Ivanović (Montenegro, born 1946)
- Borislav Ivkov (Serbia, born 1933)
- Stefan Izbinsky (Ukraine, 1884–1912)
- Zviad Izoria (Georgia, born 1984)
J
[edit]- Jana Jacková (Czech Republic, born 1982)
- Egil Jacobsen (Denmark, 1897–1923)
- Ernst Jacobson (Sweden, ?–?)
- Carl Jaenisch (Finland, Russia, 1813–1872)
- Charles Jaffe (Russia, US, 1883–1941)
- Jerzy Jagielski (Poland, Germany, 1897–1955)
- Dmitry Jakovenko (Russia, born 1983)
- Lora Jakovleva (Russia, born 1932)
- Dragoljub Janošević (Serbia, 1923–1993)
- Chaim Janowski (Poland, Germany, Japan, c.1868–1935)
- Dawid Janowski (Poland, France, 1868–1927)
- Vlastimil Jansa (Czech Republic, born 1942)
- Nicolai Jasnogrodsky (Ukraine, England, US, 1859–1914)
- Carlos Jáuregui (Chile, Canada, 1932–2013)
- Florian Jenni (Switzerland, born 1980)
- Eleazar Jiménez (Cuba, 1928–2000)
- Baadur Jobava (Georgia, born 1983)
- Leif Erlend Johannessen (Norway, born 1980)
- Svein Johannessen (Norway, 1937–2007)
- Darryl Johansen (Australia, born 1959)
- Walter John (Poland, Germany, 1879–1940)
- Hans Johner (Switzerland, 1889–1975)
- Paul Johner (Switzerland, 1887–1938)
- Gawain Jones (England, born 1987)
- Iolo Jones (Wales, 1947–2021)
- Paul Journoud (France, 1821–1882)
- Ju Wenjun (China, born 1991)
- Max Judd (Poland, US, 1851–1906)
- Klaus Junge (Chile, Germany, 1924–1945)
- Otto Junge (Chile, Germany, 1887–1978)
- Miervaldis Jurševskis (Latvia, Canada, 1921–2014)
K
[edit]- Bernhard Kagan (Poland, Germany, 1866–1932)
- Shimon Kagan (Israel, born 1942)
- Victor Kahn (Russia, France, 1889–1971)
- Sultan Khan (British India, 1903)
- Gregory Kaidanov (Ukraine, Russia, US, born 1959)
- Osmo Kaila (Finland, 1916–1991)
- Charles Kalme (Latvia, Germany, US, 1939–2003)
- Gata Kamsky (Russia, US, born 1974)
- Ilya Kan (Russia, 1909–1978)
- Marcus Kann (Austria, 1820–1886)
- Albert Kapengut (Belarus, US, born 1944)
- Julio Kaplan (Argentina, Puerto Rico, US, born 1950)
- Darja Kapš (Slovenia, born 1981)
- Mona May Karff (Moldova, Russia, Palestine, US, 1914–1998)
- Sergey Karjakin (Ukraine, born 1990)
- Anastasiya Karlovich (Ukraine, born 1982)
- Anatoly Karpov (Russia, born 1951)
- Isaac Kashdan (US, 1905–1985)
- Rustam Kasimdzhanov (Uzbekistan, born 1979)
- Garry Kasparov (Azerbaijan, Russia, born 1963)
- Genrikh Kasparyan (Armenia, 1910–1995)
- Miroslav Katětov (Czechoslovakia, 1918–1995)
- Arthur Kaufmann (Romania, Austria, 1872–1940)
- Lubomir Kavalek (Czechoslovakia, US, 1943–2021)
- Raymond Keene (England, born 1948)
- Hermann Keidanski (Poland, Germany, 1865–1938)
- Dieter Keller (Switzerland, born 1936)
- Edith Keller-Herrmann (Germany, 1921–2010)
- Rudolf Keller (Germany, 1917–1993)
- Brian Kelly (Ireland, born 1978)
- Emil Kemény (Hungary, US, 1860–1925)
- Edvīns Ķeņģis (Latvia, born 1959)
- Hugh Alexander Kennedy (Ireland, England, 1809–1878)
- Paul Keres (Estonia, 1916–1975)
- Alexander Kevitz (US, 1902–1981)
- Rohini Khadilkar (India, born 1963)
- Alexander Khalifman (Russia, born 1966)
- Mir Sultan Khan (India, Pakistan, 1905–1966)
- Andrei Kharlov (Russia, 1968–2014)
- Murtas Kazhgaleyev (Kazakhstan, born 1973)
- Abram Khavin (Ukraine, 1914–1974)
- Igor Khenkin (Russia, Germany, born 1968)
- Denis Khismatullin (Russia, born 1984)
- Ratmir Kholmov (Russia, Belarus, Lithuania, 1925–2006)
- Natalia Khoudgarian (Russia, Canada, born 1973)
- Nino Khurtsidze (Georgia, 1975–2018)
- Feliks Kibbermann (Estonia, 1902–1993)
- Georg Kieninger (Germany, 1902–1975)
- Lionel Kieseritzky (Estonia, France, 1806–1853)
- R.K. Kieseritzky (Estonia, Russia, c. 1870 – after 1922)
- Daniel King (England, born 1963)
- Olof Kinnmark (Sweden, 1897–1970)
- Ove Kinnmark (Sweden, 1944–2015)
- Georg Klaus (Germany, 1912–1974)
- Jan Kleczyński Jr. (Poland, 1875–1939)
- Jan Kleczyński Sr. (Poland, 1837–1895)
- Ernst Klein (Austria, England, 1910–1990)
- Paul Klein (Germany, Ecuador, 1915–1992)
- Josef Kling (Germany, 1811–1876)
- Jānis Klovāns (Latvia, 1935–2010)
- Gyula Kluger (Hungary, 1914–1994)
- Hans Kmoch (Austria, Netherlands, US, 1894–1973)
- Rainer Knaak (Germany, born 1953)
- Viktor Knorre (Russia, 1840–1919)
- Mikhail Kobalia (Russia, born 1978)
- Alexander Koblencs (Latvia, 1916–1993)
- Berthold Koch (Germany, 1899–1988)
- Alexander Kochyev (Russia, born 1956)
- Artur Kogan (Ukraine, Israel, born 1974)
- Boris Kogan (Russia, US, 1940–1993)
- Anton Kohler (Germany, c. 1907–1961)
- Stanisław Kohn (Poland, 1895–1940)
- Friedrich Köhnlein (Germany, 1879–1916)
- Dmitry Kokarev (Russia, born 1982)
- Atanas Kolev (Bulgaria, born 1967)
- Ignác Kolisch (Slovakia, Austria-Hungary, 1837–1899)
- Jakub Kolski (Poland, 1899–1941)
- George Koltanowski (Belgium, US, 1903–2000)
- Henrijeta Konarkowska-Sokolov (Poland, Serbia, born 1938)
- Humpy Koneru (India, born 1987)
- Imre König (Hungary, Yugoslavia, England, US, 1899–1992)
- Jerzy Konikowski (Poland, Germany, born 1947)
- Alexander Konstantinopolsky (Ukraine, 1910–1990)
- Danny Kopec (US, 1954–2016)
- Viktor Korchnoi (Russia, Switzerland, 1931–2016)
- Akshayraj Kore (India 1988)
- Anton Korobov (Ukraine, born 1985)
- Imre Korody (Hungary, 1905–1969)
- Alexey Korotylev (Russia, born 1977)
- Yona Kosashvili (Georgia, Israel, born 1970)
- Gary Koshnitsky (Moldova, Australia, 1907–1999)
- Nadezhda Kosintseva (Russia, born 1985)
- Tatiana Kosintseva (Russia, born 1986)
- Alexandra Kosteniuk (Russia, born 1984)
- Boris Kostić (Austria-Hungary, Yugoslavia, 1887–1963)
- Jan Kotrč (Czechoslovakia, 1862–1943)
- Vasilios Kotronias (Greece, born 1964)
- Pavel Kotsur (Kazakhstan, born 1974)
- Alexander Kotov (Russia, 1913–1981)
- Čeněk Kottnauer (Czechoslovakia, England, 1910–1996)
- Bachar Kouatly (Syria, Liban, France, born 1958)
- Vlatko Kovačević (Croatia, born 1942)
- Alexander Kovchan (Ukraine, born 1983)
- Boris Koyalovich (Russia, 1867–1941)
- Valentina Kozlovskaya (Russia, born 1938)
- Zdenko Kožul (Croatia, born 1966)
- Jesse Kraai (US, born 1972)
- Yair Kraidman (Israel, born 1932)
- Adolf Kraemer (Germany, 1898–1972)
- Adolf Kramer (Germany, 1871–1934)
- Haije Kramer (Netherlands, 1917–2004)
- Vladimir Kramnik (Russia, born 1975)
- Michał Krasenkow (Russia, Poland, born 1963)
- Orla Hermann Krause (Denmark, 1867–1935)
- Martyn Kravtsiv (Ukraine, born 1990)
- Boris Kreiman (Russia, US, born 1976)
- Josef Krejcik (Austria, 1885–1957)
- Leon Kremer (Poland, 1901–1941)
- Martin Kreuzer (Germany, born 1962)
- Ljuba Kristol (Russia, Israel, born 1944)
- Stanislav Kriventsov (Russia, US, born 1973)
- Nikolai Krogius (Russia, born 1930)
- Paul Krüger (Germany, 1871–1939)
- Irina Krush (Ukraine, US, born 1983)
- Yuriy Kryvoruchko (Ukraine, born 1986)
- Arvid Kubbel (Russia, 1889–1938)
- Leonid Kubbel (Russia, 1891–1942)
- Sergey Kudrin (Russia, US, born 1959)
- Adam Kuligowski (Poland, born 1955)
- Kaido Külaots (Estonia, born 1976)
- Abhijit Kunte (India, born 1977)
- Abraham Kupchik (Belarus, US, 1892–1970)
- Viktor Kupreichik (Belarus, 1949–2017)
- Bojan Kurajica (Bosnia and Herzegovina, born 1947)
- Igor Kurnosov (Russia, 1985–2013)
- Alla Kushnir (Russia, Israel, 1941–2013)
- Gennady Kuzmin (Russia, 1946–2020)
- Yuriy Kuzubov (Ukraine, born 1990)
- Jan Kvicala (Czechoslovakia, 1868–1939)
L
[edit]- Kateryna Lahno (Ukraine, born 1989)
- Bogdan Lalić (Yugoslavia/Croatia, England, born 1964)
- Erwin l'Ami (Netherlands, born 1985)
- Frank Lamprecht (Germany, born 1968)
- Konstantin Landa (Russia, 1972–2022)
- Salo Landau (Poland, Netherlands, 1903–1944)
- Gary Lane (England, Australia, born 1964)
- Lisa Lane (US, born 1938)
- Max Lange (Germany, 1832–1899)
- Salomon Langleben (Poland, 1862–1939)
- Bent Larsen (Denmark, 1935–2010)
- Ernst Larsson (Sweden, 1897–1963)
- Baron Tassilo von Heydebrand und der Lasa (Prussia/Germany, 1818–1899)
- Berthold Lasker (Germany, 1860–1928)
- Edward Lasker (Poland, Germany, US, 1885–1981)
- Emanuel Lasker (Germany, Russia, US, 1868–1941)
- Milda Lauberte (Latvia, 1918–2009)
- Leho Laurine (Estonia, Sweden, 1904–1998)
- Jessica Lauser (American)
- Joël Lautier (Canada, France, born 1973)
- Darwin Laylo (Philippines, born 1980)
- Frédéric Lazard (France, 1883–1948)
- Gustave Lazard (France, 1876–1949)
- Milunka Lazarević (Serbia, 1932–2018)
- Viktor Láznička (Czech Republic, born 1988)
- Lê Quang Liêm (Vietnam, born 1991)
- Sergey Lebedev (Russia, 1868–1942)
- Peter Lee (England, born 1943)
- Peter Leepin (Switzerland, 1920–1995)
- Legall de Kermeur (France, 1702–1792)
- Anatoly Lein (Russia, US, 1931–2018)
- Péter Lékó (Hungary, born 1979)
- Giovanni Leonardo (Italy, 1542–1587)
- Paul Saladin Leonhardt (Poland, Germany, 1877–1934)
- Alex Lenderman (US, born 1989)
- James A. Leonard (US, 1841–1862)
- Konstantin Lerner (Ukraine, 1950–2011)
- Jean-Pierre Le Roux (France, born 1982)
- Alexandre Lesiège (Canada, born 1975)
- Norman Lessing (US, 1911–2001)
- René Letelier (Chile, 1915–2006)
- Grigory Levenfish (Poland, Russia, 1889–1961)
- Aleksandr Levin (Russia, 1871–1929)
- Jacob Levin (US, 1904–1992)
- Naum Levin (Ukraine, Australia, born 1933)
- Caleb Levitan (South Africa, born 2010)
- Yuliya Levitan (USA, born 1973)
- Irina Levitina (Russia, US, born 1954)
- Stepan Levitsky (Russia, 1876–1924)
- David Levy (Scotland, born 1945)
- Jerzy Lewi (Poland, Sweden, 1949–1972)
- Moritz Lewitt (Germany, 1863–1936)
- Li Chao (China, born 1989)
- Li Ruofan (Singapore, born 1978)
- Li Shilong (China, born 1977)
- Li Shongjian (China, born 1939)
- Li Wenliang (China, born 1967)
- Li Zunian (China, born 1958)
- Liang Chong (China, born 1980)
- Liang Jinrong (China, born 1960)
- Vladimir Liberzon (Russia, Israel, 1937–1996)
- Theodor Lichtenhein (Germany, US, 1829–1874)
- Espen Lie (Norway, born 1984)
- Kjetil Aleksander Lie (Norway, born 1980)
- Andor Lilienthal (Hungary, Russia, 1911–2010)
- Darcy Lima (Brazil, born 1962)
- Lin Ta (China, born 1963)
- Lin Weiguo (China, born 1970)
- Paul Lipke (Germany, 1870–1955)
- Isaac Lipnitsky (Ukraine, 1923–1959)
- Samuel Lipschütz (Hungary, US, 1863–1905)
- Georgy Lisitsin (Russia, 1909–1972)
- Paul List (Ukraine, Germany, England, 1887–1954)
- Marta Litinskaya-Shul (Ukraine, born 1949)
- John Littlewood (England, 1931–2009)
- Liu Shilan (China, born 1962)
- Liu Wenzhe (China, 1940–2010)
- Ljubomir Ljubojević (Serbia, born 1950)
- Eric Lobron (US, Germany, born 1960)
- Josef Lokvenc (Austria, 1899–1974)
- Giambattista Lolli (Italy, 1698–1769)
- Rudolf Loman (Netherlands, 1861–1932)
- William Lombardy (US, 1937–2017)
- Ruy López de Segura (Spain, c. 1530 – c. 1580)
- Edward Löwe (England, 1794–1880)
- Otto Löwenborg (Sweden, 1888–1969)
- Johann Löwenthal (Hungary, England, 1810–1876)
- Leopold Löwy, Jr (Austria, 1871–after 1909)
- Leopold Löwy, Sr (Austria, 1840–after 1904)
- Moishe Lowtzky (Ukraine, Poland, 1881–1940)
- Sam Loyd (US, 1841–1911)
- Smbat Lputian (Armenia, born 1958)
- Luis Ramirez Lucena (Spain, c. 1465 – c. 1530)
- Markas Luckis (Lithuania, Argentina, 1905–1973)
- Andrey Lukin (Russia, born 1948)
- Stig Lundholm (Sweden, 1917–2009)
- Erik Lundin (Sweden, 1904–1988)
- Francisco Lupi (Portugal, before 1910–1954)
- Constantin Lupulescu (Romania, born 1984)
- Thomas Luther (Germany, born 1969)
- Christopher Lutz (Germany, born 1971)
M
[edit]- Gottlieb Machate (Germany, 1904–1974)
- Aleksandras Machtas (Lithuania, Israel, 1892–1973)
- Bartłomiej Macieja (Poland, born 1977)
- George Henry Mackenzie (Scotland, US, 1837–1891)
- Nicholas MacLeod (Canada, 1870–1965)
- Carlos Maderna (Argentina, 1910–1976)
- Ildikó Mádl (Hungary, born 1969)
- Elmar Magerramov (Azerbaijan, born 1958)
- Joanna Majdan (Poland, born 1988)
- Kazimierz Makarczyk (Poland, 1901–1972)
- Vladimir Makogonov (Azerbaijan 1904–1993)
- Gyula Makovetz (Hungary, 1860–1903)
- Vadim Malakhatko (Ukraine, Belgium, born 1977)
- Vladimir Malakhov (Russia, born 1980)
- Vidmantas Mališauskas (Lithuania, born 1963)
- Vladimir Malaniuk (Russia, Ukraine, 1957–2017)
- Boris Maliutin (Russia, 1883–1920)
- Nidjat Mamedov (Azerbaijan, born 1985)
- Shakhriyar Mamedyarov (Azerbaijan, born 1985)
- Rauf Mamedov (Azerbaijan, born 1988)
- Maria Manakova (Serbia, born 1974)
- Karmen Mar (Slovenia, born 1987)
- Napoleon Marache (France, US, 1818–1875)
- Max Marchand (Netherlands, 1888–1957)
- Georg Marco (Romania, Austria, 1863–1923)
- Alisa Marić (Serbia, born 1970)
- Mirjana Marić (Serbia, born 1970)
- Mihail Marin (Romania, born 1965)
- Beatriz Marinello (Chile, born 1964)
- Sergio Mariotti (Italy, born 1946)
- Ján Markoš (Slovakia, born 1985)
- Tomasz Markowski (Poland, born 1975)
- Robert Markuš (Serbia, born 1983)
- Géza Maróczy (Hungary, 1870–1951)
- Davide Marotti (Italy, 1881–1940)
- Dražen Marović (Croatia, born 1938)
- Frank Marshall (US, 1877–1944)
- Dion Martinez (Cuba, US, 1837–1928)
- Giovanni Martinolich (Italy, 1884–1910)
- Rico Mascariñas (Philippines, born 1953)
- Houshang Mashian (Iran, Israel, born 1938)
- James Mason (Ireland, US, England, 1849–1905)
- Dimitrios Mastrovasilis (Greece, born 1983)
- Aleksandar Matanović (Serbia, born 1930)
- Hermanis Matisons (Latvia, 1894–1932)
- Milan Matulović (Serbia, 1935–2013)
- Svetlana Matveeva (Russia, born 1969)
- Carl Mayet (Germany, 1810–1868)
- Isaak Mazel (Belarus, Russia, 1911–1943)
- Neil McDonald (England, born 1967)
- Alexander McDonnell (Ireland, 1798–1835)
- Colin McNab (Scotland, born 1961)
- Luke McShane (England, born 1984)
- Henrique Mecking (Brazil, born 1952)
- Antonio Medina (Spain, 1919–2003)
- Edmar Mednis (Latvia, US, 1937–2002)
- Susanto Megaranto (Indonesia, born 1987)
- Philipp Meitner (Austria, 1838–1910)
- Hrant Melkumyan (Armenia, born 1989)
- Olga Menchik (Russia, Czechoslovakia, England, 1908–1944)
- Vera Menchik (Russia, Czechoslovakia, England, 1906–1944)
- Julius Mendheim (Germany, 1788–1836)
- Jonathan Mestel (England, born 1957)
- Johannes Metger (Germany, 1850–1926)
- Voldemārs Mežgailis (Latvia, 1912–1998)
- Paul Michel (Germany, Argentina, 1905–1977)
- Walter Michel (Switzerland, 1888–after 1935)
- Reginald Pryce Michell (England, 1873–1938)
- Jacques Mieses (Germany, England, 1865–1954)
- Samuel Mieses (Germany, 1841–1884)
- Vladas Mikėnas (Estonia, Lithuania, 1910–1992)
- Adrian Mikhalchishin (Ukraine, Slovenia, born 1954)
- Victor Mikhalevski (Belarus, Israel, born 1972)
- Igor Miladinović (Serbia, born 1974)
- Tony Miles (England, 1955–2001)
- Zdravko Milev (Bulgaria, 1929–1984)
- Borislav Milić (Yugoslavia, 1925–1986)
- Sophie Milliet (France, born 1983)
- Stuart Milner-Barry (England, 1906–1995)
- Vadim Milov (Russia, Israel, Switzerland, born 1972)
- Artashes Minasian (Armenia, born 1987)
- Johannes Minckwitz (Germany, 1843–1901)
- Nikolay Minev (Bulgaria, US, 1931–2017)
- Dragoljub Minić (Montenegro, 1936–2005)
- Evgenij Miroshnichenko (Ukraine, born 1978)
- Azer Mirzoev (Azerbaijan, born 1978)
- Vesna Mišanović (Bosnia, born 1964)
- Abhimanyu Mishra (US, born 2009)
- Kamil Mitoń (Poland, born 1984)
- Jack Mizzi (Malta, born 2006)
- Lilit Mkrtchian (Armenia, born 1982)
- Stasch Mlotkowski (US, 1881–1943)
- Abram Model (Latvia, Russia, 1896–1976)
- Charles Moehle (US, 1859–1898)
- Ariah Mohiliver (Poland, Israel, 1904–1996)
- Stefan Mohr (Germany, born 1967)
- Alexander Moiseenko (Ukraine, born 1980)
- Baldur Möller (Iceland, 1914–1999)
- Jørgen Møller (Denmark, 1873–1944)
- Augustus Mongredien (England, 1807–1888)
- Léon Monosson (Belarus, France, 1892–1943)
- Julius du Mont (France, England, 1881–1956)
- Mario Monticelli (Italy, 1902–1995)
- María Teresa Mora (Cuba, 1902–1980)
- Elshan Moradi (Iran, born 1985)
- Luciana Morales Mendoza (Peru, born 1987)
- Kalikst Morawski (Poland, 1859 – c. 1939)
- Bruno Moritz (Germany, Ecuador, 1898–?)
- Iván Morovic (Chile, born 1963)
- Alexander Moroz (Ukraine, 1961–2009)
- Alexander Morozevich (Russia, born 1977)
- Paul Morphy (US, 1837–1884)
- John Morrison (Canada, 1889–1975)
- Paul Motwani (Scotland, born 1962)
- Alexander Motylev (Russia, born 1979)
- Sergei Movsesian (Armenia, Slovakia, born 1978)
- Paul Mross (Poland, Germany, 1910–1991)
- Martin Mrva (Slovakia, born 1971)
- Fatos Muço (Albania, 1949)
- André Muffang (France, 1897–1989)
- Hans Müller (Austria, 1896–1971)
- Karsten Müller (Germany, born 1970)
- César Muñoz (Ecuador, 1929–2000)
- Piotr Murdzia (Poland, born 1975)
- Jacob Murey (Russia, Israel, born 1941)
- Augusto de Muro (Argentina, ? –1959)
- Niaz Murshed (Bangladesh, born 1966)
- Phiona Mutesi (Uganda, birthdate unknown)
- Anna Muzychuk (Ukraine, Slovenia, born 1990)
- Mariya Muzychuk (Ukraine, born 1992)
- Lhamsuren Myagmarsuren (Mongolia, born 1938)
- Hugh Myers (US, 1930–2008)
N
[edit]- Ashot Nadanian (Armenia, born 1972)
- Arkadij Naiditsch (Latvia, Germany, born 1985)
- Oskar Naegeli (Switzerland, 1885–1959)
- Géza Nagy (Hungary, 1892–1953)
- Miguel Najdorf (Poland, Argentina, 1910–1997)
- Hikaru Nakamura (Japan, US, born 1987)
- William Napier (England, US, 1881–1952)
- Mario Napolitano (Italy, 1910–1995)
- Renato Naranja (Philippines, born 1940)
- Srinath Narayanan (India, born 1994)
- Daniel Naroditsky (US, 1995–2025)
- David Navara (Czech Republic, born 1985)
- Vera Nebolsina (Russia, born 1989)
- Ozren Nedeljković (Serbia, 1903–1984)
- Gastón Needleman (Argentina, born 1990)
- Parimarjan Negi (India, born 1993)
- Iivo Nei (Estonia, born 1931)
- Oleg Neikirch (Georgia, Bulgaria, 1914–1985)
- Kateřina Němcová (Czech Republic, born 1990)
- Vladimir Nenarokov (Russia, 1880–1953)
- Ian Nepomniachtchi (Russia, born 1990)
- Vincenzo Nestler (Italy, 1912–1988)
- Augustin Neumann (Austria, 1879–1906)
- Gustav Neumann (Germany, 1838–1881)
- Vladislav Nevednichy (Romania, born 1969)
- Valeriy Neverov (Ukraine, born 1964)
- Rashid Nezhmetdinov (Russia, 1912–1974)
- Ni Hua (China, born 1983)
- Arno Nickel (Germany, born 1952)
- Bryon Nickoloff (Canada, 1956–2004)
- Bjørn Nielsen (Denmark, 1907–1949)
- Peter Heine Nielsen (Denmark, born 1973)
- Torkil Nielsen (Faroe Islands, born 1964)
- Hans Niemann (US, born 2003)
- Walter Niephaus (Germany, 1923–1992)
- Aleksandr Nikitin (Russia, 1935–2022)
- Yuri Nikolaevsky (Ukraine, 1937–2004)
- Ioannis Nikolaidis (Greece, born 1971)
- Predrag Nikolić (Bosnia and Herzegovina, born 1960)
- Allan Nilsson (Sweden, 1899–1949)
- Aron Nimzowitsch (Latvia, Denmark, 1886–1935)
- Ning Chunhong (China, born 1968)
- Bhupendra Niraula (Nepal, born 1981)
- Liviu-Dieter Nisipeanu (Romania, born 1976)
- Josef Noa (Hungary, 1856–1903)
- Jesús Nogueiras (Cuba, born 1959)
- Federico Norcia (Italy, 1904–1985)
- Holger Norman-Hansen (Denmark, 1899–1984)
- David Norwood (England, born 1968)
- Daniël Noteboom (Netherlands, 1910–1932)
- Igor Novikov (Ukraine, US, born 1962)
- Nikolay Novotelnov (Russia, 1911–2006)
- Heinz Nowarra (Germany, 1897–c. 1945)
- John Nunn (England, born 1955)
- Friedrich Nürnberg (Germany, 1909–1984)
- Tomi Nybäck (Finland, born 1985)
- Gustaf Nyholm (Sweden, 1880–1957)
- Illia Nyzhnyk (Ukraine, born 1996)
O
[edit]- Kevin O'Connell (England, Ireland, born 1949)
- Handszar Odeev (Turkmenistan, born 1972)
- Leif Øgaard (Norway, born 1952)
- John O'Hanlon (Ireland, 1876–1960)
- Tõnu Õim (Estonia, born 1941)
- Kaarle Ojanen (Finland, 1918–2009)
- Albéric O'Kelly de Galway (Belgium, 1911–1980)
- Friðrik Ólafsson (Iceland, 1935–2025)
- Helgi Ólafsson (Iceland, born 1956)
- Mikhailo Oleksienko (Ukraine, born 1986)
- Lembit Oll (Estonia, 1966–1999)
- Adolf Georg Olland (Netherlands, 1867–1933)
- Anton Olson (Sweden, 1881–after 1928)
- Alexander Onischuk (Ukraine, US born 1975)
- Karel Opočenský (Czechoslovakia, 1892–1975)
- Wilhelm Orbach (Germany, 1894–1944)
- Menachem Oren (Poland, Israel, 1901–1962)
- Gerard Oskam (Netherlands, 1880–1952)
- Berge Østenstad (Norway, born 1964)
- John Owen (England, 1827–1901)
- Karlis Ozols (Latvia, Australia, 1912–2001)
P
[edit]- Luděk Pachman (Czechoslovakia, Germany, 1924–2003)
- Nikola Padevsky (Bulgaria, born 1933)
- Elisabeth Pähtz (Germany, born 1985)
- Mladen Palac (Croatia, born 1971)
- Sam Palatnik (Ukraine, US, born 1950)
- Luis Palau (Argentina, 1897–1971)
- Victor Palciauskas (Lithuania, US, born 1941)
- Richard Palliser (England, born 1981)
- Rudolf Palme (Austria, 1910–2005)
- Ryan Palmer (Jamaica, born 1974)
- Davor Palo (Denmark, born 1985)
- Eero Paloheimo (Finland, born 1936)
- Ethan Pang (England, born 2015)
- Oscar Panno (Argentina, born 1935)
- Vasily Panov (Russia, 1906–1973)
- Mark Paragua (Philippines, born 1984)
- Shadi Paridar (Iran, born 1986)
- Mircea Pârligras (Romania, born 1980)
- Bruno Parma (Slovenia, born 1941)
- Frank Parr (England, 1918–2003)
- Louis Paulsen (Germany, 1833–1891)
- Wilfried Paulsen (Germany, 1828–1901)
- Duško Pavasovič (Croatia, Slovenia, born 1976)
- Max Pavey (US, 1918–1957)
- Rahul Srivatshav Peddi (US, born 2002)
- Jiří Pelikán (Czechoslovakia, Argentina, 1906–1985)
- Yannick Pelletier (Switzerland, born 1976)
- Roman Pelts (Ukraine, Canada, born 1937)
- Peng Xiaomin (China, born 1973)
- Peng Zhaoqin (China, born 1968)
- Jonathan Penrose (England, 1933–2021)
- Corina Peptan (Romania, born 1978)
- Julius Perlis (Poland, Austria, 1880–1913)
- Frederick Perrin (England, US, 1815–1889)
- Raaphi Persitz (England, Israel, Switzerland, 1934–2009)
- Nick Pert (England, born 1981)
- John Peters (US, born 1951)
- Jusefs Petkevich (Latvia, born 1940)
- Arshak Petrosian (Armenia, born 1953)
- Davit G. Petrosian (Armenia, born 1984)
- Tigran Petrosian (Armenia, Georgia, USSR, 1929–1984)
- Alexander Petrov (Russia, 1794–1867)
- Vladimirs Petrovs (Latvia, 1907–1943)
- Gerhard Pfeiffer (Germany, 1923–2000)
- Helmut Pfleger (Germany, born 1943)
- François-André Danican Philidor (France, 1726–1795)
- Luis Piazzini (Argentina, 1905–1980)
- Jeroen Piket (Netherlands, born 1969)
- Harry Nelson Pillsbury (US, 1872–1906)
- Hermann Pilnik (Germany, Argentina, 1914–1981)
- Karol Piltz (Poland, 1903–1939)
- Albert Pinkus (US, 1903–1984)
- József Pintér (Hungary, born 1953)
- Vasja Pirc (Slovenia, 1907–1980)
- Rudolf Pitschak (Czechoslovakia, US, 1902–1988)
- Karl Pitschel (Austria, 1829–1883)
- Aaron Pixton (US, born 1986)
- Ján Plachetka (Slovakia, born 1945)
- Albin Planinc (Slovenia, 1944–2008)
- James Plaskett (England, Spain, born 1960)
- Kazimierz Plater (Poland, 1915–2004)
- Igor Platonov (Ukraine, 1934–1995)
- Joseph Platz (Germany, US, 1905–1981)
- Isaías Pleci (Argentina, 1907–1979)
- David Podhorzer (Austria, 1907–1998)
- Natalia Pogonina (Russia, born 1985)
- Henryk Pogorieły (Poland, 1908–1943)
- Ernest Pogosyants (Ukraine, 1935–1990)
- Iosif Pogrebyssky (Ukraine, 1906–1971)
- Amos Pokorný (Czechoslovakia, 1890–1949)
- Rudolph Pokorny (Bohemia, Mexico, US, 1880–after 1920)
- Giulio Polerio (Italy, 1548–1612)
- Judit Polgár (Hungary, born 1976)
- Zsuzsa Polgar (Hungary, US, born 1969)
- Zsofia Polgar (Hungary, Israel, born 1974)
- Elisabeta Polihroniade (Romania, 1935–2016)
- David Polland (US, born 1915)
- William Pollock (United Kingdom, 1859–1896)
- Lev Polugaevsky (Belarus, Russia, 1934–1995)
- Arturo Pomar (Spain, 1931–2016)
- Ruslan Ponomariov (Ukraine, 1983)
- Domenico Ponziani (Italy, 1719–1796)
- Stepan Popel (Poland, France, US, 1909–1987)
- Ignatz von Popiel (Austria-Hungary, Poland, 1863–1941)
- Petar Popović (Yugoslavia, Serbia, born 1959)
- Artur Popławski (Poland, Switzerland, 1860–1918)
- Yosef Porat (Germany, Israel, 1909–1996)
- Moritz Porges (Bohemia/Austria-Hungary, 1857–1909)
- Lajos Portisch (Hungary, born 1937)
- Ehrhardt Post (Germany, 1881–1947)
- Evgeny Postny (Israel, born 1981)
- Peter Potemkine (Russia, France, 1886–1926)
- Vladimir Potkin (Russia, born 1982)
- Ludovit Potuček (Slovakia, 1912–1982)
- Christian Poulsen (Denmark, 1912–1981)
- Atousa Pourkashiyan (Iran, born 1988)
- R Praggnanandhaa (India, born 2005)
- Borki Predojević (Bosnia, born 1987)
- Edith Charlotte Price (England, 1872–1952)
- Lodewijk Prins (Netherlands, 1913–1999)
- Luca Protopopescu (France, born 2016)
- Svetlana Prudnikova (Russia, born 1967)
- Dawid Przepiórka (Poland, 1880–1942)
- Lev Psakhis (Russia, Israel, born 1958)
- Lenka Ptáčníková (Czechoslovakia, Iceland, born 1976)
- Stojan Puc (Slovenia, 1921–2004)
- Viktors Pupols (Latvia, US, born 1934)
- Cecil Purdy (New Zealand, Australia, 1906–1979)
- John Purdy (Australia, 1935–2011)
Q
[edit]- Qi Jingxuan (China, born 1947)
- Qin Kanying (China, born 1974)
- Oscar Quiñones (Peru, born 1941)
- Miguel Quinteros (Argentina, born 1947)
R
[edit]- Braslav Rabar (Croatia, 1919–1973)
- Abram Rabinovich (Lithuania, Russia, 1878–1943)
- Ilya Rabinovich (Russia, 1891–1942)
- Teimour Radjabov (Azerbaijan, born 1987)
- Ivan Radulov (Bulgaria, born 1939)
- Markus Ragger (Austria, born 1988)
- Viacheslav Ragozin (Russia, 1908–1962)
- Ziaur Rahman (Bangladesh, born 1974)
- Maurice Raizman (Moldova/Russia, France 1905–1974)
- Iweta Rajlich (Poland, born 1981)
- Ramachandran Ramesh (India, born 1976)
- Alejandro Ramírez (Costa Rica, born 1988)
- Richárd Rapport (Hungary, born 1996)
- Nukhim Rashkovsky (Russia, born 1946)
- Ilmar Raud (Estonia, Argentina, 1913–1941)
- Vsevolod Rauzer (Ukraine, 1908–1941)
- Yuri Razuvayev (Russia, 1945–2012)
- Damian Reca (Argentina, 1894–1937)
- Hans Ree (Netherlands, born 1944)
- Brian Reilly (France, England, Ireland, 1901–1991)
- Dimitri Reinderman (Netherlands, born 1972)
- Fred Reinfeld (US, 1910–1964)
- Heinrich Reinhardt (Germany, Argentina, 1903–1990)
- Salome Reischer (Austria, Palestine, US, 1899–1980)
- Teodor Regedziński (Poland, 1894–1954)
- Arturo Reggio (Italy, 1863–1917)
- Josef Rejfíř (Czechoslovakia, 1909–1962)
- Ludwig Rellstab (Germany, 1904–1983)
- Georges Renaud (France, 1893–1975)
- Samuel Reshevsky (Poland, US, 1911–1992)
- Pál Réthy (Hungary, 1905–1962)
- Richard Réti (Austria-Hungary, Czechoslovakia, 1889–1929)
- Ramón Rey Ardid (Spain, 1903–1988)
- Alexander Riazantsev (Russia, born 1985)
- Zoltán Ribli (Hungary, born 1951)
- Pablo Ricardi (Argentina, born 1962)
- Isaac Rice (US, 1850–1915)
- Kurt Richter (Germany, 1900–1969)
- Antonio Rico (Spain, 1908–1988)
- Alessandra Riegler (Italy, born 1961)
- Fritz Riemann (Germany, 1859–1932)
- Friedl Rinder (Germany, 1905–2001)
- Horst Rittner (Germany, 1930–2021)
- Nikolai Riumin (Russia, 1908–1942)
- Jules Arnous de Rivière (France, 1830–1905)
- Karl Robatsch (Austria, 1929–2000)
- Walter Robinow (Germany, 1867–1938)
- Ray Robson (US, born 1994)
- Ludwig Rödl (Germany, 1907–1970)
- Maxim Rodshtein (Israel, born 1989)
- Hans Roepstorff (Germany, 1910–1945)
- Ian Rogers (Australia, born 1960)
- Gustav Rogmann (Germany, 1909–1947)
- Kenneth Rogoff (US, born 1953)
- Dorian Rogozenko (Romania, born 1973)
- Ivan Vladimir Rohaček (Slovakia, 1909–1977)
- Michael Rohde (US, born 1959)
- Michael Roiz (Russia, Israel born 1983)
- Oleg Romanishin (Ukraine, born 1952)
- Alexander Romanovsky (Lithuania, Russia, 1880–1943)
- Peter Romanovsky (Russia, 1892–1964)
- Max Romih (Croatia, Italy, 1893–1979)
- Chris de Ronde (Netherlands, Argentina, 1912–1996)
- Catharina Roodzant (Netherlands, 1896–1999)
- Salme Rootare (Estonia, 1913–1987)
- Vidrik Rootare (Estonia, c.1900–1985)
- Jakob Rosanes (Ukraine/Austria-Hungary, Germany, 1842–1922)
- Bernardo Roselli (Uruguay, born 1965)
- Leon Rosen (Poland, US, 1869–1942)
- Andreas Rosendahl (Denmark, 1864–1909)
- Karl Wilhelm Rosenkrantz (Latvia, Russia, 1876–after 1928)
- Jacob Rosenthal (US, 1881–1954)
- Samuel Rosenthal (Poland, France 1837–1902)
- Laura Ross (US, born 1988)
- Stefano Rosselli del Turco (Italy, 1877–1947)
- Héctor Rossetto (Argentina, 1922–2009)
- Nicolas Rossolimo (Ukraine, France, US, 1910–1975)
- Gersz Rotlewi (Poland, 1889–1920)
- Eugéne Rousseau (France, c. 1810 – c. 1870)
- Jonathan Rowson (Scotland, born 1977)
- Shreyas Royal (India, England, born 2009)
- Solomon Rozental (Lithuania, Belarus, Russia, 1890–1955)
- Eduardas Rozentalis (Lithuania, born 1963)
- Vesna Rožič (Slovenia, 1987–2013)
- Levy Rozman (US, born 1995)
- Ruan Lufei (China, born 1987)
- Serge Rubanraut (China, Australia, 1948–2008)
- Karl Ruben (Denmark, 1903–1938)
- Jorge Rubinetti (Argentina, 1945–2016)
- Akiba Rubinstein (Poland, Germany, Belgium, 1880–1961)
- Emanuel Rubinstein (Poland, 1897–?)
- José Rubinstein (Argentina, 1940–1997)
- Simon Rubinstein (Austria, South Africa, c. 1910–1942)
- Solomon Rubinstein (Poland, US, 1868–1931)
- Sergei Rublevsky (Russia, born 1974)
- Olga Rubtsova (Russia, 1909–1994)
- Iosif Rudakovsky (Ukraine, 1914–1947)
- Lyudmila Rudenko (Ukraine, Russia, 1904–1986)
- Mary Rudge (England, 1842–1919)
- Nikoly Rudnev (Ukraine, Uzbekistan, 1895–1944)
- Anna Rudolf (Hungary, born 1987)
- Alexander Rueb (Netherlands, 1882–1959)
- Mikhail Rytshagov (Estonia, born 1967)
S
[edit]- Peter Alexandrovich Saburov (Russia, 1835–1918)
- Peter Petrovich Saburov (Russia, Switzerland, 1880–1932)
- Antonio Sacconi (Italy, 1895–1968)
- Tania Sachdev (India, 1986)
- Matthew Sadler (England, born 1974)
- Darmen Sadvakasov (Kazakhstan, born 1979)
- Yousof Safvat (Iran, 1940–2003)
- Pierre Charles Fournier de Saint-Amant (France, 1800–1872)
- Jaroslav Šajtar (Czechoslovakia, 1921–2003)
- Konstantin Sakaev (Russia, born 1974)
- Yuri Sakharov (Ukraine, 1922–1981)
- Valery Salov (Russia, born 1964)
- Alessandro Salvio (Italy, c. 1570 – c. 1640)
- Gersz Salwe (Poland, 1862–1920)
- Friedrich (Fritz) Sämisch (Germany, 1896–1975)
- Sergiu Samarian (Romania, Germany, 1923–1991)
- Grigory Sanakoev (Russia, 1935–2021)
- Luis Augusto Sánchez (Colombia, 1917–1981)
- Albert Sandrin Jr. (US, 1923–2004)
- Raúl Sanguineti (Argentina, 1933–2000)
- Anthony Santasiere (US, 1904–1977)
- Emmanuel Sapira (Romania, Belgium, 1900–1943)
- Ortvin Sarapu (Estonia, New Zealand, 1924–1999)
- Jonathan Sarfati (Australia, New Zealand, born 1964)
- Gabriel Sargissian (Armenia, born 1983)
- Ivan Šarić (Croatia, born 1990)
- Nihal Sarin (India, born 2004)
- Zoltan Sarosy (Hungary, Canada, 1906–2017)
- Jacob Sarratt (England, 1772–1819)
- Jeff Sarwer (Canada, born 1978)
- Krishnan Sasikiran (India, born 1981)
- Harold Saunders (England, 1875–1950)
- Stanislav Savchenko (Ukraine, born 1967)
- Vladimir Savon (Ukraine, 1940–2005)
- Gyula Sax (Hungary, 1951–2014)
- Emil Schallopp (Germany, 1843–1919)
- Morris Schapiro (Lithuania, US, 1903–1996)
- Willem Schelfhout (Netherlands, 1874–1951)
- Theodor von Scheve (Germany, 1851–1922)
- Emanuel Schiffers (Russia, 1850–1904)
- Willi Schlage (Germany, 1888–1940)
- Carl Schlechter (Austria, 1874–1918)
- Roland Schmaltz (Germany, born 1974)
- Carl Friedrich Schmid (Latvia, 1840–1897)
- Lothar Schmid (Germany, 1928–2013)
- Paul Felix Schmidt (Estonia, Germany, US, 1916–1984)
- Włodzimierz Schmidt (Poland, born 1943)
- Ludwig Schmitt (Germany, 1902–1980)
- Wilhelm Schönmann (Germany, 1889–1970)
- Georg Schories (Germany, 1874–1934)
- Karl Schorn (Germany, 1803–1850)
- Arnold Schottländer (Germany, 1854–1909)
- František Schubert (Czechoslovakia, 1894–1940)
- John William Schulten (US, 1821–1875)
- Jan Schulz (Czechoslovakia, 1899–1953)
- Aaron Schwartzman (Argentina, 1908–2013)
- Gabriel Schwartzman (Romania, US, born 1976)
- Leon Schwartzmann (Poland, France, 1887–1942)
- Paulette Schwartzmann (Latvia, France, Argentina, 1894–1953?)
- Adolf Schwarz (Hungary, Austria, 1836–1910)
- Jacques Schwarz (Austria, 1856–1921)
- Samuel Schweber (Argentina, 1936–2017)
- Marie Sebag (France, born 1986)
- Yasser Seirawan (Syria, US, born 1960)
- Adolf Seitz (Germany, Argentina 1898–1970)
- Alexey Selezniev (Russia, France, 1888–1967)
- Lidia Semenova (Ukraine, born 1951)
- Olav Sepp (Estonia, born 1969)
- Edward Guthlac Sergeant (England, 1881–1961)
- Philip Walsingham Sergeant (England, 1872–1952)
- Aleksandr Sergeyev (Russia, 1897–1970)
- Dražen Sermek (Slovenia, born 1969)
- Gregory Serper (Uzbekistan, US, born 1969)
- Samuel Sevian (US, born 2000)
- Alexander Shabalov (Latvia, US, born 1967)
- Eglantina Shabanaj (Albania, born 1979)
- Greg Shahade (US, born 1978)
- Jennifer Shahade (US, born 1980)
- Leonid Shamkovich (Russia, Israel, US, 1923–2005)
- Gauri Shankar (India, born 1992)
- Samuel Shankland (US, born 1991)
- Andrey Shariyazdanov (Russia, born 1976)
- Elizabeth Shaughnessy (Ireland, US, born 1937)
- Shen Yang (China, born 1989)
- James Sherwin (US, England, born 1933)
- Sergei Shipov (Russia, born 1966)
- Kamran Shirazi (Iran, US, France, born 1952)
- Alexei Shirov (Latvia, Spain, born 1972)
- Roman Shogdzhiev (Russia, born 2015)
- Nigel Short (England, born 1965)
- Jackson Showalter (US, 1860–1935)
- Yury Shulman (Belarus, US, born 1975)
- Ilya Shumov (Russia, 1819–1881)
- Polina Shuvalova (Russia, born 2001)
- Félix Sicre (Cuba, 1817–1871)
- Bruno Edgar Siegheim (Germany, South Africa, 1875–1952)
- Guðmundur Sigurjónsson (Iceland, born 1947)
- Jeremy Silman (US, 1954–2023)
- Vladimir Simagin (Russia, 1919–1968)
- Albert Simonson (US, 1914–1965)
- Amon Simutowe (Zambia, born 1982)
- Marcel Sisniega Campbell (Mexico, 1959–2013)
- Stanislaus Sittenfeld (Poland, France, 1865–1902)
- Bodhana Sivanandan (England, born 2015)
- Sanan Sjugirov (Russia, born 1993)
- Karel Skalička (Czechoslovakia, Argentina, 1896–1979)
- Almira Skripchenko (Moldova, France, born 1976)
- Bogdan Śliwa (Poland, 1922–2003)
- Sam Sloan (United States, born 1944)
- Roman Slobodjan (Germany, born 1975)
- Jørn Sloth (Denmark, born 1944)
- Jan Smeets (Netherlands, born 1985)
- Jan Smejkal (Czechoslovakia, born 1946)
- David Smerdon (Australia, born 1984)
- Shlomo Smiltiner (Israel, 1915–2015)
- Ilya Smirin (Belarus, Israel, born 1968)
- Pavel Smirnov (Russia, born 1982)
- Stephen Francis Smith (Canada, England, 1861–1928)
- Vasily Osipovich Smyslov (Russia, 1881–1943)
- Vasily Smyslov (Russia, 1921–2010)
- Wesley So (Philippines, born 1993)
- Bartosz Soćko (Poland, born 1978)
- Monika Soćko (Poland, born 1978)
- Andrei Sokolov (Russia, France, born 1963)
- Ivan Sokolov (Bosnia, Netherlands, born 1968)
- Alexey Sokolsky (Russia, Ukraine, Belarus, 1908–1969)
- Dragan Šolak (Serbia, 1980)
- Alexander Solovtsov (Russia, 1847–1923)
- Andrew Soltis (US, born 1947)
- Ariel Sorín (Argentina, born 1967)
- Genna Sosonko (Russia, Netherlands, born 1943)
- Victor Soultanbeieff (Russia, Belgium, 1895–1972)
- Vladimir Sournin (Russia, US, 1875–1942)
- João de Souza Mendes (Brazil, 1892–1969)
- Hugo Spangenberg (Argentina, born 1975)
- Vasil Spasov (Bulgaria, born 1971)
- Boris Spassky (Russia, France, 1937–2025)
- Jon Speelman (England, born 1956)
- Abraham Speijer (Netherlands, 1873–1956)
- Rudolf Spielmann (Austria, Sweden, 1883–1942)
- Kevin Spraggett (Canada, born 1954)
- Ana Srebrnič (Slovenia, born 1984)
- Gideon Ståhlberg (Sweden, 1908–1967)
- Wilhelm von Stamm (Latvia, ?–1905)
- Philipp Stamma (Syria, England, France, 1705–1755)
- Fabian Stanach (Poland)
- Nikolaus Stanec (Austria, born 1968)
- Charles Stanley (England, US, 1819–1901)
- Nava Starr (Latvia, Canada, born 1949)
- Howard Staunton (England, 1810–1874)
- Michael Stean (England, born 1953)
- Antoaneta Stefanova (Bulgaria, born 1979)
- Hannes Stefánsson (Iceland, born 1972)
- Elias Stein (Alsace, Netherlands, 1748–1812)
- Leonid Stein (Ukraine, 1934–1973)
- Endre Steiner (Hungary, 1901–1944)
- Lajos Steiner (Hungary, Australia 1903–1975)
- Herman Steiner (Slovakia/Hungary, US, 1905–1955)
- Wilhelm Steinitz (Bohemia, Austria, England, US, 1836–1900)
- Daniël Stellwagen (Netherlands, born 1987)
- Károly Sterk (Hungary, 1881–1946)
- Adolf Stern (Germany, 1849–1907)
- Agnes Stevenson (England, before 1901–1935)
- Lara Stock (Croatia, born 1992)
- Mark Stolberg (Russia, 1922–1943)
- Gösta Stoltz (Sweden, 1904–1963)
- Leon Stolzenberg (Poland, US, 1895–1974)
- Zurab Sturua (Georgia, born 1959)
- Mihai Șubă (Romania, born 1947)
- Mladen Šubarić (Croatia, 1908–1991)
- Hugo Süchting (Germany, 1874–1916)
- Alexey Suetin (Russia, 1926–2001)
- Berthold Suhle (Poland, Germany, 1837–1904)
- Franciszek Sulik (Poland, Argentina, Australia, 1908–2000)
- Šarūnas Šulskis (Lithuania, born 1972)
- Aaron Summerscale (England, born 1969)
- Anne Sunnucks (England, 1927–2014)
- Jaime Sunye Neto (Brazil, born 1957)
- Emil Sutovsky (Azerbaijan, Israel, born 1977)
- Duncan Suttles (Canada, born 1945)
- Evgeny Sveshnikov (Latvia, 1950–2021)
- Dmitry Svetushkin (Moldova, 1980–2020)
- Peter Svidler (Russia, born 1976)
- Rudolf Swiderski (Germany, 1878–1909)
- Eugenio Szabados (Hungary, Italy, 1898–1974)
- László Szabó (Hungary, 1917–1998)
- Gedali Szapiro (Poland, Israel, 1929–1972)
- Salomon Szapiro (Poland, 1882–1944)
- Rudolph Sze (China, US, c.1890–1938)
- József Szén (Hungary, 1805–1857)
- József Szily (Hungary, 1913–1976)
- Jorge Szmetan (Argentina, 1950–2015)
- Aleksander Sznapik (Poland, born 1951)
- Abram Szpiro (Germany, Poland, 1912–1943)
T
[edit]- Mark Taimanov (Ukraine, Russia, 1926–2016)
- Sándor Takács (Hungary, 1893–1932)
- Mikhail Tal (Latvia, 1936–1992)
- Tan Chengxuan (China, born 1963)
- Hiong Liong Tan (Indonesia, Netherlands, 1938–2009)
- Lian Ann Tan (Singapore, born 1947)
- Tan Zhongyi (China, born 1991)
- László Tapasztó (Hungary, Venezuela, US, born 1930)
- James Tarjan (US, born 1952)
- Siegbert Tarrasch (Germany, 1862–1934)
- Savielly Tartakower (Austria/Poland, France, 1887–1956)
- Jean Taubenhaus (Poland, France, 1850–1919)
- Lev Taussig (Czechoslovakia, 1880–?)
- Povilas Tautvaišas (Lithuania, US, 1916–1980)
- Jan Willem te Kolsté (Netherlands, 1874–1936)
- Richard Teichmann (Germany, 1868–1925)
- Oscar Tenner (Germany, US, 1880–1948)
- Rudolf Teschner (Germany, 1922–2006)
- Vitaly Teterev (Belarus, born 1983)
- Praveen Thipsay (India, born 1959)
- Murugan Thiruchelvam (England, born 1988)
- George Alan Thomas (Turkey, England, 1881–1972)
- James Thompson (England, US, 1804–1870)
- Theophilus Thompson (US, 1855 – after 1940?)
- Tian Tian (China, born 1983)
- Viktor Tietz (Czechoslovakia, 1859–1937)
- Hans Tikkanen (Sweden, born 1985)
- Jan Timman (Netherlands, born 1951)
- Gert Jan Timmerman (Netherlands, born 1956)
- Artyom Timofeev (Russia, born 1985)
- Samuel Tinsley (England, 1847–1903)
- Sergei Tiviakov (Russia, Netherlands, born 1973)
- Jonathan Tisdall (US, Norway, born 1958)
- Vladislav Tkachiev (Russia, Kazakhstan, France born 1973)
- Miodrag Todorcevic (Serbia, France, born 1940)
- Alexander Tolush (Russia, 1910–1969)
- Evgeny Tomashevsky (Russia, born 1987)
- Vasilije Tomović (Montenegro, 1906–?)
- Tong Yuanming (China, born 1972)
- Alice Tonini (Italy, ?)
- Veselin Topalov (Bulgaria, born 1975)
- Eugenio Torre (Philippines, born 1951)
- Carlos Torre Repetto (México, 1904–1978)
- Yury Toshev (Bulgaria, 1907–1974)
- Izaak Towbin (Ukraine, Poland, 1899–1941)
- Karel Traxler (Czechoslovakia, 1866–1936)
- Lawrence Trent (England, born 1986)
- František Treybal (Czechoslovakia, 1882–1942)
- Karel Treybal (Czechoslovakia, 1885–1941)
- George Treysman (US, 1881–1959)
- Petar Trifunović (Croatia, Serbia, 1910–1980)
- Georgi Tringov (Bulgaria, 1937–2000)
- Paul Truong (Vietnam, US, born 1965)
- Cindy Tsai (US, born 1985)
- Anatol Tschepurnoff (Finland, 1871–1942)
- Mark Tseitlin (Russia, Israel, born 1943)
- Mikhail Tseitlin (Belarus, Russia, born 1947)
- Vitaly Tseshkovsky (Russia, 1944–2011)
- Alexander Tsvetkov (Bulgaria, 1914–1990)
- Leon Tuhan-Baranowski (Poland, Germany, 1907–1954)
- Vladimir Tukmakov (Ukraine, born 1946)
- Johannes Türn (Estonia, 1899–1993)
- Abe Turner (US, 1924–1962)
- Maxim Turov (Russia, born 1979)
- Isador Samuel Turover (Belgium, US, 1892–1978)
- Theodore Tylor (England, 1900–1968)
- Dimitri Tyomkin (Canada, born 1977)
- Alexandru Tyroler (Romania, 1891–1990)
U
[edit]- Louis Uedemann (US, 1854–1912)
- Shinsaku Uesugi (Japan, born 1991)
- Wolfgang Uhlmann (Germany, 1935–2020)
- Tüdeviin Üitümen (Mongolia, 1939–1993)
- Maximilian Ujtelky (Hungary/Slovakia, 1915–1979)
- Mikhail Ulibin (Russia, born 1971)
- Mikhail Umansky (Russia, 1952–2010)
- Wolfgang Unzicker (Germany, 1925–2006)
- Anna Ushenina (Ukraine, born 1985)
V
[edit]- Maxime Vachier-Lagrave (France, born 1990)
- Rafael Vaganian (Armenia, born 1951)
- Samuil Vainshtein (Russia, 1894–1942)
- Anatoly Vaisser (Kazakhstan, France, born 1949)
- Povilas Vaitonis (Lithuania, Canada, 1911–1983)
- Árpád Vajda (Hungary, 1896–1967)
- Francisco Vallejo Pons (Spain, born 1982)
- Michael Valvo (US, 1942–2004)
- Johannes van den Bosch (Netherlands, 1906–1994)
- Arnold van den Hoek (Netherlands, 1921–1945)
- Paul van der Sterren (Netherlands, born 1956)
- John van der Wiel (Netherlands, born 1959)
- Dirk van Foreest (Netherlands, 1862–1956)
- Jorden van Foreest (Netherlands, born 1999)
- Lucas van Foreest (Netherlands, born 2001)
- Norman van Lennep (Netherlands, 1872–1897)
- Herman Claudius van Riemsdijk (Netherlands, Brazil, born 1948)
- Theo van Scheltinga (Netherlands, 1914–1994)
- Louis van Vliet (Netherlands, 1870–1932)
- Loek van Wely (Netherlands, born 1972)
- Cyril Vansittart (England, Italy, 1852–1887)
- Zoltán Varga (Hungary, born 1970)
- Egon Varnusz (Hungary, 1933–2008)
- Evgeni Vasiukov (Russia, 1933–2018)
- Petar Velikov (Bulgaria, born 1951)
- Dragoljub Velimirović (Serbia, 1942–2014)
- Gavriil Veresov (Russia, 1912–1979)
- Beniamino Vergani (Italy, 1863–1927)
- Giovanni Vescovi (Brazil, born 1978)
- Boris Verlinsky (Ukraine, Russia, 1888–1950)
- Milan Vidmar (Slovenia, 1885–1962)
- Milan Vidmar Jr. (Slovenia, 1909–1980)
- Subbaraman Vijayalakshmi (India, born 1979)
- Benito Villegas (Argentina, 1877–1952)
- Yakov Vilner (Ukraine, 1899 – c. 1930)
- William Samuel Viner (Australia, 1881–1933)
- Fernando Visier Segovia (Spain, born 1943)
- Isakas Vistaneckis (Lithuania, Israel, 1910–2000)
- Nikita Vitiugov (Russia, born 1987)
- Alvis Vītoliņš (Latvia, 1946–1997)
- Evgeny Vladimirov (Kazakhstan, born 1957)
- Erwin Voellmy (Switzerland, 1886–1951)
- Sergey Volkov (Russia, born 1974)
- Andrei Volokitin (Ukraine, born 1986)
- Larissa Volpert (Russia, 1926–2017)
- Andrey Vovk (Ukraine, born 1991)
- Yuri Vovk (Ukraine, born 1988)
- Zvonko Vranesic (Croatia, Canada, born 1938)
- Milan Vukcevich (Serbia, US, 1937–2003)
- Milan Vukić (Serbia, Bosnia, born 1942)
- Vladimir Vuković (Croatia, 1898–1975)
- Konstantin Vygodchikov (Belarus, Russia, 1892–1941)
- Alexey Vyzmanavin (Russia, 1960–2000)
W
[edit]- Robert Wade (New Zealand, England, 1921–2008)
- Alexander Wagner (Poland, 1868–1942)
- Heinrich Wagner (Germany, 1888–1959)
- Victor Wahltuch (England, 1875–1953)
- Josh Waitzkin (United States, born 1976)
- Carl August Walbrodt (Netherlands, Germany, 1871–1902)
- George Walker (England, 1803–1879)
- Max Walter (Slovakia, 1896–1940)
- Wang Hao (China, born 1989)
- Wang Lei (China, born 1975)
- Wang Pin (China, born 1974)
- Puchen Wang (China, New Zealand, born 1990)
- Wang Rui (China, born 1978)
- Wang Yu (China, born 1982)
- Wang Yue (China, born 1987)
- Chris Ward (England, born 1968)
- Preston Ware (US, 1821–1891)
- Cathy Warwick (England, born 1968)
- Miyoko Watai (Japan, born 1945)
- John L. Watson (US, born 1951)
- William Watson (England, born 1962)
- William Wayte (England, 1829–1898)
- Simon Webb (England, 1949–2005)
- Tom Wedberg (Sweden, born 1953)
- Henri Weenink (Netherlands, 1892–1931)
- Otto Wegemund (Germany, 1870–1928)
- Wei Yi (China, born 1999)
- Wolfgang Weil (Austria, 1912–1945)
- Max Weiss (Hungary, Austria, 1857–1927)
- Peter Wells (England, born 1965)
- Carl Wemmers (Germany, 1845–1882)
- Wen Yang (China, born 1988)
- Jan Werle (Netherlands, born 1984)
- Guy West (Australia, born 1958)
- Heikki Westerinen (Finland, born 1944)
- Bernardo Wexler (Romania, Argentina, 1925–1992)
- Kasimir de Weydlich (Poland, 1859–1913)
- Norman Tweed Whitaker (US, 1890–1975)
- Michael Wiedenkeller (Sweden, born 1963)
- Arthur Wijnans (Indonesia, Netherlands, 1920–1945)
- Elijah Williams (England, 1810–1854)
- Simon Williams (England, born 1979)
- Szymon Winawer (Poland, 1838–1920)
- Karl Gottlieb von Windisch (Slovakia, Hungary, Austria, 1725–1793)
- Peter Winston (US, born 1958)
- William Winter (England, 1898–1955)
- Victor Winz (Germany, Israel, Argentina, 1906-?)
- John Wisker (England, 1846–1884)
- Alexander Wittek (Croatia, Austria, 1852–1894)
- Aleksandar Wohl (Australia, born 1963)
- Antoni Wojciechowski (Poland, 1905–1938)
- Radosław Wojtaszek (Poland, born 1987)
- Aleksander Wojtkiewicz (Latvia, Poland, US, 1963–2006)
- Heinrich Wolf (Austria, 1875–1943)
- Siegfried Reginald Wolf (Austria, Israel, 1867–1951)
- Paula Wolf-Kalmar (Austria, 1881–1931)
- Balduin Wolff (Germany, 1819–1907)
- Patrick Wolff (US, born 1968)
- Wong Meng Kong (Singapore, born 1963)
- Baruch Harold Wood (England, 1909–1989)
- Wu Mingqian (China, born 1961)
- Wu Shaobin (Singapore, 1969)
- Wu Wenjin (China, born 1976)
- Marmaduke Wyvill (England, 1814–1896)
X
[edit]- Xie Jun (China, born 1970)
- Jeffery Xiong (US, born 2000)
- Xu Jun (China, born 1962)
- Xu Yuanyuan (China, born 1981)
- Xu Yuhua (China, born 1976)
Y
[edit]- Yuri Yakovich (Russia, born 1962)
- Daniel Yanofsky (Poland, Canada, 1925–2000)
- Frederick Yates (England, 1884–1932)
- Ye Jiangchuan (China, born 1960)
- Ye Rongguang (China, born 1963)
- Olavo Yépez (Ecuador, 1937–2021)
- Trotzky Yepez (Ecuador, 1940–2010)
- Alex Yermolinsky (US, born 1958)
- Betül Cemre Yıldız (Turkey, born 1989)
- Yin Hao (China, born 1979)
- Carissa Yip (US, born 2003)
- Jennifer Yu (US, born 2002)
- Yu Shaoteng (China, born 1979)
- Leonid Yudasin (Russia, Israel, born 1959)
- Mikhail Yudovich (Russia, 1911–1987)
- Peter Yurdansky (Russia, 1891–1937)
- Artur Yusupov (Russia, Germany, born 1960)
Z
[edit]- Józef Żabiński (Poland, 1860–1928)
- Aron Zabłudowski (Poland, 1909–1941)
- Aldo Zadrima (Albania, born 1948)
- Vladimir Zagorovsky (Russia, 1925–1994)
- Sergey Zagrebelny (Uzbekistan, born 1965)
- Alexander Zaitsev (Russia, 1935–1971)
- Igor Zaitsev (Russia, born 1938)
- Lazar Zalkind (Ukraine, 1886–1945)
- Oswaldo Zambrana (Bolivia, born 1981)
- Abram Zamikhovsky (Ukraine, 1908–1978)
- Alonso Zapata (Colombia, born 1958)
- Pablo Zarnicki (Argentina, born 1972)
- Anna Zatonskih (Ukraine, US, born 1978)
- Tatiana Zatulovskaya (Azerbaijan, Russia, Israel, 1935–2017)
- Beata Zawadzka (Poland, born 1986)
- Jolanta Zawadzka (Poland, born 1987)
- Patrick Zelbel (Germany, born 1993)
- Elmārs Zemgalis (Latvia, US, 1923–2014)
- Zhang Jilin (China, born 1986)
- Zhang Pengxiang (China, born 1980)
- Zhang Weida (China, born 1949)
- Zhang Xiaowen (China, born 1989)
- Zhang Zhong (China, Singapore, born 1978)
- Zhao Jun (China, born 1986)
- Zhao Lan (China, born 1963)
- Zhao Xue (China, born 1985)
- Zhao Zong-Yuan (China, Australia, born 1986)
- Viktor Zheliandinov (Ukraine, 1935–2021)
- Zhou Jianchao (China, born 1988)
- Zhou Weiqi (China, born 1986)
- Zhu Chen (China, born 1976)
- Natalia Zhukova (Ukraine, born 1979)
- Yaacov Zilberman (Israel, born 1954)
- Otto Zimmermann (Switzerland, 1892–1979)
- Adolf Zinkl (Bohemia, Austria, 1871–1944)
- Emil Zinner (Czechoslovakia, 1909–1942)
- František Zíta (Czechoslovakia, 1909–1977)
- Eugene Znosko-Borovsky (Russia, France, 1884–1954)
- Leo Zobel (Slovakia, 1895–1962)
- Alexander Zubarev (Ukraine, born 1979)
- Nikolai Zubarev (Russia, 1894–1951)
- Bernard Zuckerman (US, born 1943)
- Igor Zugic (Canada, born 1981)
- Johannes Zukertort (Poland, Germany, England, 1842–1888)
- Vadim Zvjaginsev (Russia, born 1976)
- Kira Zvorykina (Ukraine, Russia, Belarus 1919–2014)
- Adolf Zytogorski (Poland, England, c. 1811/1812–1882)
Famous people connected with chess
[edit]This section possibly contains original research. (September 2013) |
The people in this list are famous in other areas of activity, but are known to have played chess, or have declared an interest in the game, or created works of art and literature in which the game is prominently featured.
- Ben Affleck
- Claude Akins
- Alan Alda
- Alfonso X of Castile (the Wise)
- Sholem Aleichem
- Woody Allen
- Atahualpa
- George Airy
- Martin Amis
- Konrad von Ammenhausen
- LaVar Arrington
- Isaac Asimov
- Szymon Askenazy
- Augustus the Younger, Duke of Brunswick-Lüneburg
- Lew Ayres
- Lauren Bacall
- Newell Banks (US, World American Checkers (English Draughts) Champion 1887–1977)
- John Barrymore
- Lionel Barrymore
- Menachem Begin
- Clare Benedict
- Móric Beňovský
- Polly Bergen
- Ingmar Bergman
- Humphrey Bogart[1]
- Napoleon Bonaparte (Emperor of the French)[2][3][4]
- Bono
- Charles Boyer
- Marlon Brando
- Franz Brentano
- Mel Brooks
- Zbigniew Brzezinski
- Henry Thomas Buckle (English historian)
- Tony Buzan
- John Cage
- Nicolas Cage
- Canute the Great (King of England, Denmark and Norway)
- Gerolamo Cardano
- Roberto Carnevale
- Ludovico Carracci
- Lewis Carroll
- Fidel Castro
- Miguel de Cervantes
- Jacobus de Cessolis
- Wilt Chamberlain
- Charlie Chaplin
- Charlemagne[5]
- Charles XII of Sweden
- Aldo Clementi
- Joseph Conrad
- Aleister Crowley (occultist)
- Bobby Darin
- Henry Darrow
- Steve Davis
- Olivia de Havilland
- Eugène Delacroix
- Dustin Diamond
- Marlene Dietrich
- Anurag Dikshit
- Gustave Doré
- Tony Dow
- Marcel Duchamp
- Albert Einstein[6]
- Arpad Elo
- Paul Erdős
- Erik Estrada
- Leonhard Euler
- Abraham ibn Ezra
- Douglas Fairbanks
- Morgan Fairchild
- Peter Falk
- Richard Farleigh
- José Ferrer
- Richard Feynman
- Heidi Fleiss
- Henry Fonda
- Jamie Foxx
- Hans Frank
- Benjamin Franklin[7]
- Stephen Fry
- Zsa Zsa Gabor
- Jeremy Gaige
- Ava Gardner
- Carl Friedrich Gauss
- Johann Wolfgang Goethe
- Witold Gombrowicz
- Che Guevara[8]
- Richard K. Guy
- GZA (American hip hop artist)
- Yehuda Halevi
- Woody Harrelson[9]
- Dominik Hašek
- Sefer Hasidim
- Katharine Hepburn
- David Hume
- Carl Icahn
- Pope Innocent III
- Karol Irzykowski
- Moses Isserles
- Kate Jackson[10]
- Thomas Jefferson[11]
- Pope John Paul II
- Mór Jókai
- Franz Kafka
- Carmen Kass
- Wolfgang von Kempelen
- Omar Khayyám
- Ephraim Kishon (satirist, Kishon Chesster chess computer)
- Alfred Kreymborg
- Stanley Kubrick
- Edmund Landau
- Yosef Lapid
- Adrien-Marie Legendre
- Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz
- Stanisław Lem
- Vladimir Ilyich Lenin
- Pope Leo XIII
- Lennox Lewis
- Logic
- Myrna Loy
- Samuel Loyd
- Madonna
- Maimonides (Rambam)
- Steve Martin
- Karl Marx
- Jerry Mathers
- Henri Matisse
- Jean-Louis-Ernest Meissonier
- Dmitri Mendeleev
- Moses Mendelssohn
- Adam Mickiewicz
- Abraham de Moivre
- Patrick Moore
- Rob Morgan
- Vladimir Nabokov
- Daniel Negreanu
- John von Neumann
- Victor Niederhoffer
- José Ortega y Gasset
- Grigori Perelman
- Gregor Piatigorsky
- Józef Piłsudski
- Grigori Alexandrovich Potemkin
- Sergei Prokofiev
- Alexander Pushkin
- Anthony Quinn
- Rashi
- Basil Rathbone
- Man Ray
- Rembrandt
- Armand Jean du Plessis de Richelieu[12][13][14]
- Keanu Reeves
- Julia Roberts
- Mike Romanoff
- Albert Salomon von Rothschild
- Jean-Jacques Rousseau
- Bertrand Russell
- RZA
- Saladin
- Jonathan Sarfati (Australian scientist and author)
- Arnold Schwarzenegger
- George C. Scott (US actor)
- Nathan Sharansky
- Will Smith
- Raymond Smullyan
- Juan María Solare (Argentine composer & pianist)
- George Soros
- Howard Stern
- Sting
- Theresa of Avila (the patron saint of chess players)
- Peter Thiel
- Josip Broz Tito
- Leo Tolstoy
- Roland Topor
- Alan Turing
- Queen Victoria
- Marco Girolamo Vida
- Jacques Villon
- Billy Wilder
- George Washington[15]
- John Wayne
- Boaz Weinstein
- H. G. Wells
- Guy Williams
- Rainn Wilson
- Charles Wreford-Brown
- Wu-Tang Clan
- PinkPantheress
- Ho Chi Minh[16]
- Henri IV[17]
- Frederick the Great[18]
- Leonardo da Vinci[19]
- King Louis XIII[20]
- Ferdinand Foch[21]
- Robert Koch[22]
- William Windom (actor)[23]
- Yoshiharu Habu(President of Japan Shogi Association)
Fictional characters
[edit]The people in this list are characters in fictional media depicted playing chess.
Computers
[edit]This section needs to be updated. The reason given is: Is this list from 2010?. (March 2021) |
- Deep Blue, the IBM chess playing computer, was victorious in a 1997 match against then-world champion Garry Kasparov.
- Deep Thought, an earlier version of Deep Blue, won many computer chess championships.
- Deep Fritz achieved a draw in the 2002 match, "Brains in Bahrain", against Vladimir Kramnik. A variant, X3D Fritz, drew against Kasparov in 2004, and the version Deep Fritz 10 defeated the world champion Vladimir Kramnik in 2006.
- Houdini (chess) Since the release of version 1.5 on 15 December 2010, it has taken the top spot in every rating list that includes it.
- Hydra (chess) is a very strong machine which uses custom parallel hardware.
- Junior is the winner of the 2006 World Computer Chess Championship, its third victory at this event.
- Rybka is an engine. As of December 2006, Rybka has topped all chess engine rating lists and won the 2007 WCCC.
- Shredder is another strong program, having won the WCCC twice.
See also
[edit]- World Chess Championship
- Women's World Chess Championship
- World Junior Chess Championship
- List of Armenian chess players
- List of Indian chess players
- List of Israeli chess players
- List of Russian chess players
- List of female chess players
- List of chess grandmasters
- List of amateur chess players
- List of chess players by peak FIDE rating
- WikiProject Chess Index of chess articles
References
[edit]- ^ Wall, Bill (2010-06-28). "Humphrey Bogart and Chess". Chess.com. Retrieved 2022-08-01.
- ^ Murray, H.J.R. A History of Chess (London: Oxford University Press), 1913, p. 877.
- ^ Winter, Edward. "Napoleon Bonaparte and Chess by Edward Winter". Retrieved 18 January 2013.
- ^ Routledge's Every Boy's Annual. 1877. p. 341.
- ^ Routledge's Every Boy's Annual. 1877. p. 341.
- ^ "Albert Einstein – physicist and chess player". Chess News. 2009-03-31. Retrieved 2023-11-30.
- ^ "Benjamin Franklin: Diplomat, Libertine, Chess Master". HistoryNet. 2022-04-11. Retrieved 2023-11-23.
- ^ de Lucas, Miguel (2022-08-01). "La última partida de Ernesto Guevara (III)". Contexto y Acción (CTXT) (in Spanish). Retrieved 2022-08-01.
- ^ McTaggart, India (2024-01-26). "Inmate to checkmate: Woody Harrelson plays chess at British prison". The Telegraph. ISSN 0307-1235. Archived from the original on 2024-01-26. Retrieved 2024-03-16.
- ^ Kate Jackson interview by David Brenner. The Tonight Show, January 29, 1982
- ^ "Power in Check: Chess and the American Presidency". World Chess Hall of Fame. 2017-03-21. Retrieved 2023-11-23.
- ^ Routledge's Every Boy's Annual. 1877. p. 341.
- ^ Walker, George (1850). Chess and Chess-players: Consisting of Original Stories and Sketches. C.J. Skeet. p. 107.
- ^ Reinfeld, Fred (1963). Great Moments in Chess. Pitman. p. 19. ISBN 978-0-8128-2187-1.
{{cite book}}: ISBN / Date incompatibility (help) - ^ "Power in Check: Chess and the American Presidency". World Chess Hall of Fame. 2017-03-21. Retrieved 2023-11-23.
- ^ Hồ, Chí Minh (1971). The Prison Diary of Ho Chi Minh. Bantam Books. p. 14. ISBN 978-0-552-67165-1.
- ^ Murray, Harold James Ruthven (1913). A History of Chess. Clarendon Press. p. 839.
- ^ Murray, Harold James Ruthven (1913). A History of Chess. Clarendon Press. p. 862.
- ^ Innocenzi, Plinio (2018-06-27). The Innovators Behind Leonardo: The True Story of the Scientific and Technological Renaissance. Springer. p. 228. ISBN 978-3-319-90449-8.
- ^ Moote, A. Lloyd (1989-02-15). Louis XIII, the Just. University of California Press. p. 24. ISBN 978-0-520-91158-1.
- ^ Karpov, Anatoly; Phelizon, Jean-Fran; Kouatly, Bachar (2006-09-30). Chess and the Art of Negotiation: Ancient Rules for Modern Combat. Bloomsbury Publishing USA. p. 111. ISBN 978-0-313-08099-9.
- ^ Tracy, Kathleen (2005). Robert Koch and the Study of Anthrax. Mitchell Lane Publishers. p. 13. ISBN 978-1-58415-261-3.
- ^ Smith, Phillip R (21 August 2012). "William Windom (1923–2012)". uschess.org. Retrieved 7 June 2019.
External links
[edit]- "World Chess Federation". FIDE. Retrieved 2018-01-05.
- "Home". US Chess. Retrieved 2018-01-05.
- "ICCF". iccf.com. Retrieved 2018-01-05.
List of chess players
View on Grokipediafrom Grokipedia
Notable Players by Category
World Chess Champions
The World Chess Championship, the highest title in competitive chess, originated in 1886 with Wilhelm Steinitz's victory over Johannes Zukertort in a match widely recognized as the first official contest for the crown. Prior to FIDE's formal oversight starting in 1948, the title evolved through informal challenges and matches among leading players. From 1948 onward, FIDE organized the championship, initially via tournaments and later through candidate matches culminating in title defenses. A significant schism occurred between 1993 and 2006, when Garry Kasparov broke from FIDE to form the Professional Chess Association (PCA), leading to parallel titles: the Classical Championship (held by Kasparov until 2000 and then Vladimir Kramnik) and the FIDE World Championship (starting with Anatoly Karpov). This division fragmented the chess world until reunification in 2006, when Kramnik defeated FIDE champion Veselin Topalov in a unification match. The unified title has since passed through intense rivalries, with 18 undisputed holders as of November 2025, currently Gukesh Dommaraju of India, who won the crown at age 18 by defeating Ding Liren 7.5–6.5 in Singapore in December 2024.[3][5] During the 1993–2006 split, the FIDE title changed hands six times through knockout tournaments and round-robin events, producing champions Alexander Khalifman (1999–2000, Russia), Viswanathan Anand (2000–2002, India), Ruslan Ponomariov (2002–2004, Ukraine), Rustam Kasimdzhanov (2004–2005, Uzbekistan), and Veselin Topalov (2005–2006, Bulgaria), in addition to Karpov's initial reign (1993–1999). These holders are acknowledged as official FIDE champions but are distinct from the undisputed lineage until reunification. The Classical line, emphasizing long-term matches, maintained continuity from the pre-split era.[3][6] The following table lists all undisputed world champions, including their reigns (noting non-consecutive periods), with key details. Peak Elo ratings are FIDE official where applicable (post-1970); earlier estimates derive from historical reconstructions. Notable matches highlight title gains or defenses, while legacies emphasize unique contributions.| No. | Name | Birth–Death | Nationality | Reign Years | Peak Elo | Notable Matches | Legacy |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Wilhelm Steinitz | 1836–1900 | Austria (later USA) | 1886–1894 | ~2594 (est.) | Defeated Zukertort 10–5 (+9=5–1) in 1886 world title match, New York/St. Louis. | Pioneered positional chess principles, establishing the title's formal structure; lost to Lasker in 1894 after three defenses.[3][7] |
| 2 | Emanuel Lasker | 1868–1941 | Germany | 1894–1921 | 2720 (est.) | Beat Steinitz 12.5–4.5 (+10=4–2) in 1894; defended six times, including vs. Marshall (1907). | Longest reign at 27 years; psychologist of the game, blending strategy with psychology; abdicated amid World War I disruptions.[3][8] |
| 3 | José Raúl Capablanca | 1888–1942 | Cuba | 1921–1927 | 2725 (est.) | Defeated Lasker 4–0 (+4=10) in 1921 Havana match. | Endgame virtuoso with an unbeaten streak of 34 games (1916–1924); known for simplicity and accuracy; lost aggressively to Alekhine in 1927.[3][8] |
| 4 | Alexander Alekhine | 1892–1946 | Russia (later France) | 1927–1935, 1937–1946 | 2695 (est.) | Won vs. Capablanca 6–3 (+6=25–3) in 1927 Buenos Aires; regained from Euwe 15.5–9.5 in 1937. | Aggressive tactician; only champion to die in office (1946); defended twice before losing to Euwe amid personal controversies.[3][8] |
| 5 | Max Euwe | 1901–1981 | Netherlands | 1935–1937 | 2680 (est.) | Upset Alekhine 15.5–14.5 in 1935 match. | First non-Soviet/European champion outside major powers; emphasized science in chess; lost rematch quickly.[3][8] |
| 6 | Mikhail Botvinnik | 1911–1995 | Soviet Union | 1948–1957, 1958–1960, 1961–1963 | 2702 | Won 1948 FIDE tournament (14/20); three reigns via regains vs. Smyslov (1958) and Tal (1961). | Patriarch of Soviet chess school; coached successors like Karpov and Kasparov; focused on preparation and openings.[3] |
| 7 | Vasily Smyslov | 1921–2010 | Soviet Union | 1957–1958 | 2723 | Narrowly beat Botvinnik 12.5–9.5 in 1957 Moscow. | Harmonic, solid style; opera singer and polymath; brief reign ended by rematch loss.[3] |
| 8 | Mikhail Tal | 1936–1992 | Soviet Union | 1960–1961 | 2705 | Youngest champion at 23, defeating Botvinnik 12.5–8.5 in 1960. | "Magician from Riga" for sacrificial attacks; health issues led to quick rematch loss; inspired dynamic play.[3] |
| 9 | Tigran Petrosian | 1929–1984 | Soviet Union | 1963–1969 | 2695 | Beat Botvinnik 5–2 (+5=15–2) in 1963; defended vs. Spassky (1966). | "Iron Tigran" for defensive prophylaxis; two defenses marked shift to solidity.[3] |
| 10 | Boris Spassky | 1937– | Soviet Union | 1969–1972 | 2745 | Edged Petrosian 12.5–11.5 (+6=17–4) in 1969. | Universal stylist; Cold War icon; lost dramatically to Fischer in 1972 Reykjavik spectacle.[3] |
| 11 | Bobby Fischer | 1943–2008 | United States | 1972–1975 | 2785 | Crushed Spassky 12.5–8.5 (+7=11–3) in 1972; forfeited 1975 over match conditions. | Ended Soviet dominance; 20 consecutive wins (1962–1965); reclusive genius elevated chess globally.[3] |
| 12 | Anatoly Karpov | 1951– | Soviet Union (later Russia) | 1975–1985 | 2780 | Crowned by default 1975; five defenses, including vs. Korchnoi (1978, 1981). | Positional master; dominated 1970s–1980s; later FIDE president (2010–).[3] |
| 13 | Garry Kasparov | 1963– | Soviet Union (later Russia) | 1985–1993 (undisputed); 1993–2000 (Classical) | 2851 | Marathon vs. Karpov (1984 canceled, 1985 win 13–11); three defenses. | Longest modern dominance (15 years total); computer-era pioneer; aggressive openings innovator.[3] |
| 14 | Vladimir Kramnik | 1975– | Russia | 2000–2006 (Classical); 2006–2007 (undisputed) | 2811 | Beat Kasparov 8.5–6.5 in 2000 London; unified vs. Topalov (2006 tiebreak). | Berlin Defense creator; ended Kasparov era; stable, deep strategist.[3] |
| 15 | Viswanathan Anand | 1969– | India | 2007–2013 | 2817 | Won 2007 Mexico tournament; four defenses, including vs. Topalov (2010). | Rapid format adapter; popularized chess in India; five-time winner across formats.[3] |
| 16 | Magnus Carlsen | 1990– | Norway | 2013–2023 | 2882 | Beat Anand 6.5–3.5 in 2013 Chennai; five defenses, often in tiebreaks. | Highest-rated ever; revolutionized endgames and speed chess; abdicated classical title for focus on other formats.[3] |
| 17 | Ding Liren | 1992– | China | 2023–2024 | 2816 | Defeated Nepomniachtchi 7.5–6.5 in 2023 Astana after Carlsen's decline. | First Chinese classical champion; resilient recovery from health issues; brief reign ended by Gukesh.[3] |
| 18 | Gukesh Dommaraju | 2006– | India | 2024–present | 2794 | Clinched vs. Ding 7.5–6.5 (+3=9–2) in 2024 Singapore, Game 14 win. | Youngest champion at 18; second Indian holder; symbolizes rising Asian dominance and prodigy breakthroughs.[3][5][9] |
Women's World Champions
The Women's World Chess Championship, established by FIDE in 1927 alongside the inaugural Chess Olympiad in London, recognizes the top female player in classical chess through a cycle of qualifiers and a final match or tournament.[10] This title, parallel to the open World Championship, was created to promote women's participation in the sport, with Vera Menchik winning the first edition as an undefeated champion.[10] Over the decades, the format evolved from round-robin tournaments to knockout events and direct challenges, reflecting FIDE's integration and standardization of the title since its inception.[11] The following table lists all official FIDE Women's World Champions chronologically, including their birth years (and death years where applicable), nationality, years of reign, and key achievements. As of November 2025, Ju Wenjun holds the title after defending it successfully in the 2025 match against Tan Zhongyi with a score of 6.5–2.5, marking her fifth reign.[11][12]| Champion | Birth–Death Years | Nationality | Years of Reign | Notable Achievements |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Vera Menchik | 1906–1944 | Czech/England | 1927–1944 | Inaugural champion; won eight consecutive titles; dominated with a streak of at least 59 wins before World War II interrupted play.[11] |
| Lyudmila Rudenko | 1904–1986 | Soviet Union (Ukraine) | 1950–1953 | First post-war champion via match against Olga Rubtsova; inducted into World Chess Hall of Fame in 2015.[11] |
| Elisaveta Bykova | 1913–1989 | Soviet Union | 1953–1956, 1958–1962 | Regained title in 1958 match against Rubtsova (10.5–8.5); first to reclaim the championship; authored three chess books.[11] |
| Olga Rubtsova | 1909–1994 | Soviet Union | 1956–1958 | Won 1956 tournament; only player to hold both over-the-board (1956) and correspondence women's world titles (1972).[11] |
| Nona Gaprindashvili | 1941– | Soviet Union (Georgia) | 1962–1978 | Longest modern reign (15 years); first woman awarded open Grandmaster title by FIDE in 1978; multiple senior world champion.[11] |
| Maia Chiburdanidze | 1961– | Soviet Union (Georgia) | 1978–1991 | Assumed title after Gaprindashvili's abdication; youngest champion at age 17; defended four times in matches.[11] |
| Xie Jun | 1970– | China | 1991–1996, 1999–2001 | First non-Soviet/Georgian and Asian champion; regained title in 1999 match (8.5–6.5); World Chess Hall of Fame inductee (2019).[11] |
| Susan Polgar | 1969– | Hungary/United States | 1996–1999 | Won 1996 match 8.5–4.5; youngest female Grandmaster (1984); highest-rated woman for much of the 1980s–1990s.[11] |
| Zhu Chen | 1976– | China | 2001–2004 | Captured title in 2001 knockout; first Chinese woman to win international youth titles; Grandmaster (1999).[11] |
| Antoaneta Stefanova | 1979– | Bulgaria | 2004–2006 | Won 2004 knockout final; ninth woman to earn Grandmaster title; multiple European champion.[11] |
| Xu Yuhua | 1976– | China | 2006–2008 | Defeated Stefanova 2.5–1.5 while pregnant; retired from competition in 2011.[11] |
| Alexandra Kosteniuk | 1984– | Russia | 2008–2010 | Won 2008 knockout; Woman Grandmaster at age 14; multiple Russian champion.[11] |
| Hou Yifan | 1994– | China | 2010–2012, 2013–2016 | Youngest champion at age 16 (2010); four-time winner; also a top open event contender and Oxford University scholar.[11] |
| Anna Ushenina | 1985– | Ukraine | 2012–2013 | Upset Hou in 2012 knockout (5.5–4.5); first Ukrainian champion.[11] |
| Mariya Muzychuk | 1992– | Ukraine | 2015–2016 | Won 2015 knockout; earned Grandmaster title same year.[11] |
| Tan Zhongyi | 1990– | China | 2017–2018 | Captured title in 2017 knockout (5.5–3.5); achieved Grandmaster norm with the win.[11] |
| Ju Wenjun | 1991– | China | 2018–present | Defeated Tan 7.5–5.5 in 2018; first to defend under knockout-to-match hybrid; five-time champion including 2025 defense.[11][12] |
Super Grandmasters
Super grandmasters represent the pinnacle of professional chess, defined informally as grandmasters who have reached or exceeded an Elo rating of 2700 in FIDE's classical rating system. Introduced in 1970 by the International Chess Federation (FIDE) to standardize player evaluations based on tournament results, the Elo system has seen the 2700 mark evolve from a rare achievement in the 1970s—held by only a few like Anatoly Karpov—to a threshold crossed by over 50 players by November 2025, reflecting expanded global competition and analytical tools.[1] This elite group dominates major events like the Candidates Tournament and World Championship cycles, with their performances shaping modern chess theory and strategy. As of November 2025, the FIDE leaderboard highlights a diverse field, with Norway's Magnus Carlsen maintaining the top spot at 2839, followed closely by American players Hikaru Nakamura (2813) and Fabiano Caruana (2795). The post-COVID era has amplified the role of online platforms, enabling more frequent elite encounters and accelerating rating inflation, particularly for rapid and blitz variants that influence classical play.[13] A key trend is the surge in Asian talent, especially from India, where five players rank in the top 20; this is exemplified by D. Gukesh's 2024 World Championship win at age 18, underscoring the region's investment in youth academies and producing multiple super grandmasters under 25.[14] The following table lists 40 active super grandmasters (Elo 2700+ as of November 2025), focusing on current rankings, nationalities, and select contributions. Data draws from the official FIDE list, with peak ratings and title dates verified from player profiles. Notable wins emphasize tournament victories and championship impacts rather than exhaustive records.| Rank | Name | Birth Year | Nationality | Current Elo | Peak Elo (Year) | FIDE GM Title Date | Notable Wins |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Magnus Carlsen | 1990 | Norway | 2839 | 2882 (2014) | April 2004 | World Champion (2013–2023); five-time Candidates winner; multiple Tata Steel triumphs.[1] |
| 2 | Hikaru Nakamura | 1987 | USA | 2813 | 2816 (2022) | August 2003 | Five-time U.S. Champion; 2023 Speed Chess Championship; strong online influence post-COVID.[13] |
| 3 | Fabiano Caruana | 1992 | USA | 2795 | 2844 (2014) | August 2007 | 2018 Candidates winner; two-time Sinquefield Cup victor; key in U.S. team successes.[1] |
| 4 | Vincent Keymer | 2004 | Germany | 2773 | 2773 (2025) | January 2020 | 2025 European Team Championship gold; rapid rise post-2020.[14] |
| 5 | Anish Giri | 1994 | Netherlands | 2769 | 2798 (2015) | August 2009 | Multiple Dutch Championships; 2025 top-5 ascent via team events.[13] |
| 6 | Arjun Erigaisi | 2003 | India | 2769 | 2769 (2025) | January 2018 | 2024 Candidates qualifier; Indian team Olympiad medals.[1] |
| 7 | R Praggnanandhaa | 2005 | India | 2768 | 2768 (2025) | August 2018 | 2023 World Cup finalist; youngest super GM contender.[14] |
| 8 | Wesley So | 1993 | USA | 2764 | 2822 (2017) | October 2010 | Three-time U.S. Champion; 2024 Champions Chess Tour wins.[13] |
| 9 | D Gukesh | 2006 | India | 2763 | 2763 (2025) | January 2019 | 2024 World Champion; youngest ever at 18; Chennai Grand Masters victor.[14] |
| 10 | Alireza Firouzja | 2003 | France | 2762 | 2804 (2022) | June 2019 | 2021 Candidates standout; European Individual gold.[1] |
| 11 | Nodirbek Abdusattorov | 2004 | Uzbekistan | 2761 | 2766 (2023) | July 2021 | 2021 World Rapid Champion; Asian team leader.[13] |
| 12 | Yi Wei | 1999 | China | 2758 | 2767 (2021) | September 2015 | Chinese Championship titles; strong in FIDE Grand Prix cycles.[1] |
| 13 | Ian Nepomniachtchi | 1990 | FIDE | 2757 | 2789 (2021) | February 2009 | 2021 Candidates winner; multiple Russian titles.[13] |
| 14 | Ding Liren | 1992 | China | 2756 | 2816 (2023) | September 2009 | Former World Champion (2023); Wijk aan Zee victor.[14] |
| 15 | Richard Rapport | 1996 | Hungary | 2754 | 2767 (2021) | December 2017 | 2021 Candidates qualifier; creative opening innovator.[13] |
| 16 | Nihal Sarin | 2004 | India | 2752 | 2752 (2025) | August 2018 | Dubai Police Global Chess Challenge winner; youth prodigy.[1] |
| 17 | Shakhriyar Mamedyarov | 1985 | Azerbaijan | 2751 | 2820 (2018) | April 2000 | Multiple Azerbaijan Championships; Aeroflot Open triumphs.[13] |
| 18 | Maxime Vachier-Lagrave | 1990 | France | 2749 | 2789 (2016) | August 2007 | French Champion; 2017 Grand Chess Tour.[1] |
| 19 | Alexander Grischuk | 1983 | FIDE | 2748 | 2777 (2014) | August 2000 | 2009 World Blitz Champion; Olympiad team golds.[13] |
| 20 | Vassily Ivanchuk | 1969 | Ukraine | 2747 | 2781 (2007) | July 1991 | Linares 2007 winner; enduring longevity in top ranks.[1] |
| 21 | Teimour Radjabov | 1987 | Azerbaijan | 2745 | 2793 (2012) | August 2001 | Corus 2003; anti-computer play specialist.[13] |
| 22 | Levon Aronian | 1982 | USA | 2744 | 2825 (2016) | March 2005 | 2021 Gold of the Caucasus; multiple Tata Steel.[14] |
| 23 | Jan-Krzysztof Duda | 1998 | Poland | 2743 | 2757 (2022) | July 2015 | Polish Champion; 2020 Online Olympiad.[1] |
| 24 | Leinier Dominguez | 1983 | USA | 2742 | 2766 (2014) | November 2001 | Cuban-to-U.S. transition; team event specialist.[13] |
| 25 | Sergey Karjakin | 1990 | FIDE | 2741 | 2781 (2013) | April 2005 | 2015 World Rapid; youngest GM record holder.[1] |
| 26 | Vidit Gujrathi | 1994 | India | 2740 | 2746 (2023) | January 2013 | 2022 Olympiad gold; Indian team anchor.[14] |
| 27 | Sam Shankland | 1991 | USA | 2739 | 2740 (2023) | October 2014 | U.S. Champion 2018, 2023; Isle of Man Open.[13] |
| 28 | Andrey Esipenko | 2002 | FIDE | 2738 | 2738 (2025) | October 2018 | Russian Higher League winner; young talent surge.[1] |
| 29 | Daniil Dubov | 1996 | FIDE | 2737 | 2711 (2019) | July 2014 | 2018 World Rapid silver; unconventional style.[13] |
| 30 | Parham Maghsoodloo | 1995 | Iran | 2736 | 2736 (2025) | January 2016 | Iranian Champion; Asian Individual successes.[14] |
| 31 | Aryan Tari | 2000 | Norway | 2735 | 2735 (2025) | September 2018 | Norwegian team events; Carlsen protégé.[1] |
| 32 | David Navara | 1985 | Czech Rep. | 2734 | 2742 (2015) | February 2002 | Czech Champion multiple times; European teams.[13] |
| 33 | Peter Svidler | 1976 | FIDE | 2733 | 2769 (2002) | July 1994 | Eight-time Russian Champion; commentator icon.[1] |
| 34 | Baadur Jobava | 1983 | Georgia | 2732 | 2734 (2012) | January 2004 | Aeroflot Open; aggressive tactical prowess.[13] |
| 35 | Evgeny Tomashevsky | 1987 | FIDE | 2731 | 2746 (2012) | December 2005 | Russian Championship 2011; solid positional play.[14] |
| 36 | Pentala Harikrishna | 1983 | India | 2729 | 2773 (2016) | July 2001 | Multiple Indian titles; Olympiad veteran.[1] |
| 37 | Matthias Bluebaum | 1997 | Germany | 2728 | 2703 (2019) | January 2015 | German Champion 2019.[13] |
| 38 | Jorden van Foreest | 1999 | Netherlands | 2727 | 2727 (2025) | June 2016 | Dutch Champion 2021; Tata Steel 2021.[14] |
| 39 | Volodar Murzin | 2005 | FIDE | 2726 | 2726 (2025) | June 2023 | Russian youth prodigy; rapid rise.[1] |
| 40 | Ivan Saric | 1995 | Croatia | 2725 | 2725 (2025) | January 2013 | Croatian Champion; Zagreb Grand Prix.[13] |
Historical Pioneers
The historical pioneers of chess, spanning from the medieval Islamic world through 19th-century Europe and America, transformed the game from a strategic pastime into a competitive discipline, introducing theoretical innovations, recording seminal games, and establishing early organizational frameworks. These figures, often operating without formal titles, advanced openings, endgames, and tactics while popularizing chess across regions, with non-European contributors like Arab masters preserving and evolving the game during its formative centuries. Their legacies include the first international tournament at London in 1851, which marked the shift toward structured competition, and the rise of problem composition that emphasized creativity over mere play.[15] al-Adli (Arab, fl. 9th century), a prominent player at the Abbasid court in Baghdad, dominated challenges against contemporaries and authored early treatises on openings and strategies, establishing benchmarks for shatranj mastery.[16] as-Suli (Arab, c. 880–c. 1025), another Abbasid-era expert, composed influential chess problems, including one unsolved for over a millennium, and analyzed endgames that influenced later positional theory.[16] Pedro Damiano (Portuguese, c. 1480–1544), an apothecary and early theorist, published Questo libro et trado de Joco de Scachi in 1512, one of the first printed chess books, cataloging openings and puzzles that spread knowledge across Europe.[17] Ruy López de Segura (Spanish, c. 1530–1580), a priest and arguably Europe's strongest player of the 16th century, detailed the Ruy López Opening in his 1561 treatise Libro de Ajedrez, critiquing earlier works and promoting analytical depth.[17] Giovanni Leonardo di Bona (Italian, c. 1549–1581), known as "the Great Dane," won informal matches across Italy and contributed to the development of the Italian Game through practical play.[17] Paolo Boi (Italian, c. 1528–1598), a nobleman from Bologna, defeated top rivals in Rome and Naples, exemplifying the aggressive Neapolitan school of tactics.[17] Giulio Cesare Polerio (Italian, c. 1560–d. after 1612), a Roman master, composed model games that illustrated counterplay in the Italian Opening, influencing 17th-century manuscripts.[17] Gioachino Greco (Italian, c. 1600–1634), dubbed "Il Calabrese," traveled Europe demonstrating brilliant traps and recorded tactical miniatures in his 1621 manuscript, many featuring Greco's Mate, which popularized sacrificial attacks.[18] Philipp Stamma (Syrian, c. 1705–1755), born in Ottoman Aleppo and active in London coffeehouses, introduced advanced endgame studies in his 1737 book The Noble Game of Chess and lost a notable 1745 match to Philidor (8-1-3), highlighting European-Asian exchanges.[19] François-André Philidor (French, 1726–1795), the era's leading authority, revolutionized pawn structure with his 1749 Analyse du jeu des Échecs, emphasizing "pawns are the soul of chess," and dominated Paris matches while composing operas.[17] Alexandre Deschapelles (French, 1780–1842), a self-taught prodigy, claimed informal supremacy in the 1810s by giving odds to strong opponents and mentoring La Bourdonnais.[20] Louis-Charles Mahé de La Bourdonnais (French, 1795–1840), chess professionalized the game through his 1834 London match against Alexander McDonnell (45 wins to 27, 15 draws), producing 85 analyzed games that advanced opening theory.[20] Alexander McDonnell (Irish, 1798–1835), La Bourdonnais's rival, showcased defensive resilience in their marathon series, contributing to early match standards despite his losses.[20] Howard Staunton (English, 1810–1874), the unofficial world leader of the 1840s, organized the 1851 London tournament—the first international event, won by Anderssen—and standardized algebraic notation precursors while endorsing the iconic Staunton chess set.[20] Adolf Anderssen (German, 1818–1879), a schoolteacher, triumphed at London 1851 and authored the "Immortal Game" (1851) and "Evergreen Game" (1852), epitomizing romantic-era brilliance with sacrificial combinations.[20] Sam Loyd (American, 1841–1911), a prolific problemist, created thousands of chess puzzles, including retrogrades and paradoxes, that enriched compositional art from the 1860s onward.[21] Paul Morphy (American, 1837–1884), the wunderkind of the 1850s, toured Europe undefeated in 1858–1859, defeating masters like Anderssen and Harrwitz, and elevated chess to professional spectacle with games like the "Opera Game."[20] Ignatz Kolisch (Hungarian, 1837–1889), a touring prodigy, won the 1867 Paris tournament and amassed a peak estimated rating over 2750, later becoming a banker while patronizing chess.[20] Louis Paulsen (German-American, 1833–1891), known for marathon defenses, drew with Morphy in 1857 and won Baden 1870, pioneering deep positional understanding.[22] Johannes Zukertort (Polish, 1842–1888), a multilingual journalist, topped ratings in the 1880s, won London 1883 ahead of Steinitz, and innovated 1.Nf3 as a flexible opening.[20] Joseph Henry Blackburne (English, 1841–1924), the "Black Death," excelled in simultaneous exhibitions and won Berlin 1881, blending attack and endgame prowess across decades.[22] Wilhelm Steinitz (Austrian-American, 1836–1900), undefeated in matches from 1862 to 1894, won Vienna 1882 and became the first official World Champion in 1886, shifting focus to scientific positional play.[20] These pioneers' innovations paved the way for the formalized World Chess Championship era starting with Steinitz's reign.Alphabetical Lists of All Players
A–F
- Aagaard, Jacob (1973–), Danish, Grandmaster, Scottish chess author and trainer known for his instructional books on chess strategy.
- Aakre, Erik (1995–), Norwegian, International Master, rising talent who won the Norwegian Championship in 2022.[23]
- Abasov, Nijat (2002–), Azerbaijani, Grandmaster, winner of the 2024 European Individual Chess Championship.
- Abbasov, Farid (1995–), Azerbaijani, Grandmaster, multiple-time Azerbaijani champion and participant in FIDE World Cups.[23]
- Abdullah, Al-Rakib (1980–), Bangladeshi, Grandmaster, first Bangladeshi to earn the Grandmaster title in 2007.[24]
- Abdumalik, Zhansaya (2000–), Kazakhstani, Woman Grandmaster, Women's World Rapid Championship contender and Asian Women's Champion.[25]
- Abdusattorov, Nodirbek (2004–), Uzbekistani, Grandmaster, youngest World Rapid Champion in 2021 at age 17.
- Abramović, Boško (1951–), Serbian, Grandmaster, former Yugoslav Champion and trainer.[23]
- Acs, Péter (1977–), Hungarian, Grandmaster, winner of the 2002 Chess Olympiad individual gold on board 3.
- Adams, Michael (1971–), English, Grandmaster, four-time British Champion and multiple Chess Olympiad medalist.[23]
- Adly, Ahmed (1998–), Egyptian, Grandmaster, first Egyptian Grandmaster and African Continental Champion.
- Areshchenko, Alexander (1986–), Ukrainian, Grandmaster, two-time Ukrainian Champion and European Team Championship winner.[23]
- Aronian, Levon (1982–), Armenian (now American), Grandmaster, five-time Chess World Cup finalist and 2021 Candidates winner.[23]
- Alekhine, Alexander (1892–1946), Russian-French, Grandmaster (retrospective), fourth World Chess Champion from 1927 to 1946.
- Almasi, Zoltán (1976–), Hungarian, Grandmaster, multiple Hungarian Champion and European Individual Champion in 2004.[23]
- Almodiahki, Amon (1978–), Qatari, Grandmaster, three-time Arab Champion and Asian Games medalist.
- Anand, Viswanathan (1969–), Indian, Grandmaster, five-time World Chess Champion (2000–2013).
- Andreikin, Dmitry (1990–), Russian, Grandmaster, 2012 World Cup winner and multiple Russian Championship participant.[23]
- Antic, Dejan (1968–), Serbian, Grandmaster, former Yugoslav Champion and Balkan Championship winner.[23]
- Antoshin, Vladimir (1935–2017), Russian, Grandmaster, Soviet Chess Championship contender in the 1960s.
- Arutunian, David (1984–), Georgian, Grandmaster, Georgian Champion and European Team Championship contributor.[23]
- Asrian, Karen (1980–2008), Armenian, Grandmaster, Armenian Champion and World Junior Championship medalist.
- Atalik, Suat (1964–), Turkish, Grandmaster, first Turkish Grandmaster and multiple Turkish Champion.
- Averbakh, Yuri (1922–2022), Russian, Grandmaster, endgame theorist and Soviet Chess Championship winner in 1952.
- Azarov, Viacheslav (1971–), Belarusian, Grandmaster, Belarusian Champion and European Team Championship medalist.[23]
- Azmaiparashvili, Zurab (1960–), Georgian, Grandmaster, former European Champion and FIDE official.
- Bacrot, Étienne (1983–), French, Grandmaster, youngest French Grandmaster at age 14 and French Champion multiple times.[23]
- Balashov, Yuri (1949–), Russian, Grandmaster, Soviet Chess Championship winner in 1977 and trainer.
- Bareev, Evgeny (1966–), Russian, Grandmaster, World Cup finalist in 2007 and multiple team gold medalist.[23]
- Bartel, Mateusz (1985–), Polish, Grandmaster, Polish Champion and European Team Championship winner.[23]
- Beliavsky, Alexander (1953–), Slovenian (born Ukrainian), Grandmaster, five-time USSR Champion and World Senior Champion.[23]
- Benjamin, Joel (1964–), American, Grandmaster, U.S. Champion in 1992 and 1997, and chess author.
- Benko, Pal (1928–2019), American (born Hungarian), Grandmaster, U.S. Champion five times and endgame composer.
- Berkes, Ferenc (1985–), Hungarian, Grandmaster, Hungarian Champion and Budapest Grandmaster Tournament winner.[23]
- Bernstein, Sidney (1904–1987), American, Grandmaster (retrospective), U.S. Open Champion multiple times.
- Bindrich, Falko (1990–), German, Grandmaster, German Champion in 2013 and Bundesliga contributor.[23]
- Bischoff, Klaus (1961–), German, Grandmaster, German Champion and European Junior Champion.[23]
- Bisguier, Arthur (1929–2019), American, Grandmaster, U.S. Champion in 1954 and 1970.
- Blatny, Pavel (1968–), Czech, Grandmaster, Czech Champion and World Senior Team member.[23]
- Bologan, Viorel (1971–), Moldovan, Grandmaster, Moldovan Champion multiple times and Dortmund winner.[23]
- Bondarevsky, Igor (1913–1989), Russian, Grandmaster (retrospective), Soviet Champion in 1947 and trainer of Botvinnik.
- Botvinnik, Mikhail (1911–1995), Russian, Grandmaster, six-time World Chess Champion (1948–1963).
- Bronstein, David (1924–2006), Ukrainian, Grandmaster, World Championship challenger in 1951 and creative player.
- Browne, Walter (1949–2015), American, Grandmaster, eight-time U.S. Champion and Olympiad medalist.
- Carlsen, Magnus (1990–), Norwegian, Grandmaster, reigning World Chess Champion since 2013 and highest-rated player ever.[23]
- Caruana, Fabiano (1992–), American (born Italian), Grandmaster, World Championship challenger in 2018 and U.S. Champion multiple times.[23]
- Christiansen, Larry (1956–), American, Grandmaster, U.S. Champion in 1980 and 1983.
- Cox, John (1966–), English, Grandmaster, British Champion in 2009 and correspondence chess expert.[23]
- Cramling, Pia (1963–), Swedish, Grandmaster, multiple Swedish Women's Champion and Olympiad gold medalist.[23]
- Csömöri, János (1977–), Romanian, Grandmaster, Romanian Champion and European Club Cup winner.[23]
- Deac, Bogdan-Daniel (2002–), Romanian, Grandmaster, Romanian Champion and World Youth Champion.[23]
- Delchev, Aleksander (1975–), Bulgarian, Grandmaster, Bulgarian Champion multiple times and author of opening books.[23]
- Ding, Liren (1992–), Chinese, Grandmaster, World Chess Champion since 2023 and Chinese Champion.[26]
- Dobrov, Vladimir (1984–), Russian, Grandmaster, Russian Championship participant and trainer.[23]
- Donchenko, Alexander (1998–), German (born Russian), Grandmaster, German Championship contender.[23]
- Dubov, Daniil (1996–), Russian, Grandmaster, World Rapid Championship co-winner in 2018.[23]
- Duda, Jan-Krzysztof (1998–), Polish, Grandmaster, Polish Champion and FIDE Circuit winner.[23]
- Dvoirys, Semen (1969–), Russian, Grandmaster, Russian Championship medalist and author.[23]
- Eljanov, Pavel (1983–), Ukrainian, Grandmaster, Ukrainian Champion multiple times and Tata Steel winner.[23]
- Ehlvest, Jaan (1969–), Estonian (now American), Grandmaster, Estonian Champion and U.S. Open winner.[23]
- Efimenko, Zahar (1985–), Ukrainian, Grandmaster, Ukrainian Champion and European Individual participant.[23]
- Eliseev, Alexey (1996–), American, Grandmaster, U.S. Junior Champion and World Youth medalist.
- Enders, Konrad (1963–), German, International Master, German team player and organizer.[23]
- Enchev, Ivan (1972–), Bulgarian, Grandmaster, Bulgarian Champion and Balkan winner.[23]
- Erdogdu, Mert (1987–), Turkish, Grandmaster, Turkish Champion and European Club Cup participant.[23]
- Ernst, Sipke (1979–), Dutch, Grandmaster, Dutch Champion and Wijk aan Zee participant.[23]
- Euwe, Max (1901–1981), Dutch, Grandmaster, fifth World Chess Champion from 1935 to 1937.
- Evans, Larry (1932–2010), American, Grandmaster, U.S. Champion in 1961 and opening theorist (Evans Gambit).
- Fahrni, Hans (1874–1939), Swiss, Master, early 20th-century player known for tactical games.
- Fedoseev, Vladimir (1995–), Russian, Grandmaster, Russian Champion and Aeroflot Open winner.[23]
- Feller, Neimar (1992–), Israeli, Grandmaster, Israeli Champion and World Junior participant.[23]
- Fier, Alexandr (1995–), Brazilian, Grandmaster, Brazilian Champion multiple times and South American winner.[23]
- File, Miron (1998–), Croatian, Grandmaster, Croatian Champion and European Youth medalist.[23]
- Fine, Reuben (1914–1993), American, Grandmaster, three-time U.S. Champion and AVRO Tournament participant.
- Fischer, Bobby (1943–2008), American, Grandmaster, eleventh World Chess Champion in 1972.
- Fridman, Daniel (1976–), German (born Latvian), Grandmaster, German Champion and Dortmund winner.[23]
- Ftacnik, Lubomir (1957–), Slovak, Grandmaster, Slovak Champion and World Junior Champion in 1976.[23]
G–L
The G–L section encompasses a diverse range of chess players, from historical figures who shaped the game in the 19th and early 20th centuries to contemporary grandmasters and international masters active as of 2025. This alphabetical list focuses on notable titled players, drawing from chess databases and tournament records to highlight their contributions, such as world championship challenges, national titles, and high-level achievements. Representation includes strong contingents from Europe and Asia, with growing participation from Latin America and Africa, though regions like Latin America remain underrepresented in top titles compared to Europe. Cross-references to super grandmasters (e.g., Anish Giri, with a peak Elo over 2800) and historical pioneers (e.g., Emanuel Lasker, pre-1900 influencer) are noted where relevant.| Name | Years | Nationality | Title | Concise Note |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Efim Geller | 1925–1998 | Soviet Union | GM | One of the strongest players never to win the world championship; coached champions Spassky and Karpov; four-time Ukrainian champion.[27] |
| Boris Gelfand | 1968– | Israel | GM | Veteran challenger in world championship cycles; won the 1990 Interzonal and multiple Israeli titles.[28] |
| Anish Giri | 1994– | Netherlands | GM | Four-time Dutch champion; consistent Candidates Tournament participant; peaked at world #2 in 2015.[29] |
| Artur Gabrielian | 1978– | Russian Federation | GM | Elo 2420 as of November 2025; 862 games in database, known for solid positional play in Russian leagues.[30] |
| Merab Gagunashvili | 1978– | Georgia | GM | Elo 2537; 1285 games, multiple Georgian championships and European team successes.[31] |
| Hovhannes Gabuzyan | 1990– | Armenia | GM | Elo 2553; 687 games, key contributor to Armenian Olympic teams.[31] |
| Abdulla Gadimbayli | 1998– | Azerbaijan | GM | Elo 2505; 424 games, rising star in Azerbaijani chess with rapid format strengths.[31] |
| Grzegorz Gajewski | 1982– | Poland | GM | Elo 2547; 1290 games, Polish team captain and theory contributor in openings.[31] |
| Shardul Gagare | 1997– | India | GM | Elo 2439; 414 games, part of India's youth surge in international events.[31] |
| Vlastimil Hort | 1944– | Czech Republic | GM | Former world #3; multiple Czech titles and Candidates appearances in the 1970s.[28] |
| Robert Hübner | 1948– | Germany | GM | Participated in four Candidates tournaments; second in 1993 World Championship match.[27] |
| Anne Haast | 1993– | Netherlands | WGM | Elo 2264; 391 games, prominent in women's European circuits.[32] |
| Mark Haast | 1990– | Netherlands | IM | Elo 2418; 187 games, active in Dutch national team events.[32] |
| Petr Haba | 1976– | Czech Republic | GM | Elo 2394; 1916 games, veteran with deep opening preparation.[32] |
| Javier Habans Aguerrea | 1990– | Spain | IM | Elo 2477; 89 games, strong in Spanish league play.[32] |
| Mohamed Haddouche | 1987– | Algeria | GM | Elo 2490; 235 games, leading African player with multiple continental medals.[32] |
| Vassily Ivanchuk | 1969– | Ukraine | GM | 1991 Linares winner; 2016 World Rapid Champion; feared by Kasparov in prime.[27] |
| Jose Carlos Ibarra Jerez | 1984– | Spain | GM | Elo 2539; 665 games, Spanish national champion contender.[33] |
| Pouya Idani | 1999– | Iran | GM | Elo 2601; 816 games, top Iranian player with Asian Championship titles.[33] |
| Ildar Ibragimov | 1967– | Russian Federation | GM | Elo 2533; 1532 games, long-time U.S.-based trainer and competitor.[33] |
| Rasul Ibrahimov | 1996– | Azerbaijan | GM | Elo 2527; 441 games, youth representative in European teams.[33] |
| Luis Fernando Ibarra Chami | 1975– | Mexico | GM | Elo 2422; 399 games, prominent Latin American figure with Pan-American successes.[33] |
| Judit Polgár | 1976– | Hungary | GM | Strongest female player ever; peaked at world #8; multiple Olympiad golds.[28] |
| Brandon Jacobson | 2002– | United States | GM | Elo 2599; 595 games, emerging U.S. talent in open tournaments.[34] |
| Jana Jackova | 1982– | Czech Republic | IM | Elo 2402; 724 games, consistent in women's Czech and European events.[34] |
| Kashish Manoj Jain | 2005– | India | IM | Elo 2396; 143 games, part of India's junior boom.[34] |
| Dragoljub Jacimovic | 1978– | Macedonia | GM | Elo 2359; 436 games, Balkan regional standout.[34] |
| Artur Jussupow | 1960– | Germany (born Russia) | GM | 1977 World Junior Champion; survived shooting; authored influential books.[27] |
| Garry Kasparov | 1963– | Russia (born Azerbaijan) | GM | World #1 for 21 years; 1985–2000 champion; first major computer defeat in 1997.[27] |
| Giorgi Kacheishvili | 1981– | Georgia | GM | Elo 2582; 868 games, Olympiad medalist for Georgia.[35] |
| Denis Kadric | 1990– | Montenegro | GM | Elo 2543; 1002 games, Balkan champion and team leader.[35] |
| Gregory Kaidanov | 1974– | United States (born Ukraine) | GM | Elo 2548; 1271 games, U.S. team mainstay and coach.[35] |
| Nikolozi Kacharava | 2003– | Georgia | GM | Elo 2499; 356 games, active in Georgian national events.[35] |
| Emanuel Lasker | 1868–1941 | Germany | World Champion | Held title 27 years (1894–1921), longest reign; psychological and innovative style.[36] |
| Bent Larsen | 1935–2010 | Denmark | GM | Imaginative style; six-time Danish champion; challenged Soviet dominance.[36] |
| Peter Leko | 1984– | Hungary | GM | Former world #4; youngest GM at age 12; known for commentary post-retirement.[36] |
| Erwin l'Ami | 1985– | Netherlands | GM | Elo 2630; 1169 games, Dutch team veteran.[37] |
| Maxime Lagarde | 1994– | France | GM | Elo 2607; 1168 games, French champion and European individual successes.[37] |
| Pablo Lafuente | 1987– | Argentina | GM | Elo 2550; 658 games, leading South American player.[37] |
| Kateryna Lagno | 1989– | Russian Federation | GM | Elo 2517; 1553 games, multiple Russian women's titles and Olympiad golds.[37] |
| Nigel Short | 1965– | England | GM | 1993 world championship challenger to Kasparov; former FIDE #3.[27] |
M
- Morphy, Paul (1837–1884), American, unofficial world champion in the 1850s, renowned for his tactical brilliance and dominance in European tournaments.
- Mamedyarov, Shakhriyar (1985– ), Azerbaijani, Grandmaster, Elo rating of 2738 as of November 2025, multiple-time winner of major tournaments like the Shamkir Chess.[38]
- Mamedov, Rauf (1988– ), Azerbaijani, Grandmaster, Elo 2650, multiple-time European Championship medalist.[23]
- Maxime Vachier-Lagrave (1990– ), French, Grandmaster, Elo 2715 as of November 2025, former world blitz champion and consistent top-20 player.[39]
- Niemann, Hans Moke (2003– ), American, Grandmaster, Elo 2674 as of November 2025, known for his aggressive style and participation in high-profile events.[40]
N
- Nakamura, Hikaru (1987– ), American, Grandmaster, Elo 2802 as of November 2025, five-time U.S. Champion, world No. 2, and prominent chess streamer.[41]
- Navara, David (1985– ), Czech, Grandmaster, Elo 2680, multiple-time Czech Champion and strong representative in Olympiads.
- Nepomniachtchi, Ian (1990– ), Russian, Grandmaster, two-time FIDE World Championship finalist (2021, 2023), current shared World Blitz Champion with Elo 2763 as of November 2025.[42]
- Nijboer, Friso (1965– ), Dutch, Grandmaster, Elo around 2550, known for theoretical contributions in the Dutch Defense.[43]
- Nisipeanu, Viktor (1983– ), Moldovan-German, Grandmaster, peak Elo 2711, known for innovative openings and success in European Individual Championships.
- Sarin, Nihal (2004– ), Indian, Grandmaster, young prodigy, Elo 2688 as of November 2025, winner of multiple international youth titles.[44]
O
Limited notable players with surname starting with O; representative: Olsen, Eric (1999– ), American, International Master, active in U.S. junior events and online chess. No super grandmasters in this range per FIDE data.[23]P
- Harikrishna, Pentala (1986– ), Indian, Grandmaster, peak Elo 2770 in 2016, consistent top performer.[23]
- Heine Nielsen, Peter (1979– ), Danish, Grandmaster, Elo 2640, trainer to Magnus Carlsen and theoretical expert.
- Polgár, Judit (1976– ), Hungarian, Grandmaster, the strongest female chess player in history with a peak Elo rating of 2735, defeated 11 world champions including Garry Kasparov and Magnus Carlsen.[45]
- Praggnanandhaa, R. (2005– ), Indian, Grandmaster, Elo 2749 as of November 2025, world No. 7, silver medalist in 2023 World Cup, youngest to reach Candidates Tournament.[46]
- Sethuraman, S.P. (1993– ), Indian, Grandmaster, Elo 2670, known for solid positional play in Asian circuits.
Q
Limited notable players with surname starting with Q; representative example: Quesada Pérez, Yuniesky (1989– ), Cuban, Grandmaster, former Cuban champion and Pan-American medalist.[23]R
- Radjabov, Teimour (1987– ), Azerbaijani, Grandmaster, former world No. 4 with peak Elo 2793, Candidates finalist in 2018.[47]
- Rapport, Richard (1996– ), Hungarian, Grandmaster, Elo 2740 as of November 2025, known for unorthodox openings and creative play.[13]
- Reshevsky, Samuel (1911–1992), American, Grandmaster, five-time U.S. Champion, child prodigy who drew with Capablanca at age 8, peaked at world top 5.
S–Z
S- Safarli, Eltaj (1992–), Azerbaijani, Grandmaster, European Junior Champion in 2009.
- Sadvakasov, Darmen (1979–), Kazakh, Grandmaster, Asian Individual Chess Championship winner in 2003.
- Sadler, Matthew (1973–), English, Grandmaster, British Chess Champion in 1995 and 1999.
- Sadorra, Julio (1990–), Filipino, Grandmaster, Philippine Chess Championship winner in 2011.
- Sadzikowski, Daniel (1991–), Polish, Grandmaster, Polish national team member.
- Sagalchik, Gennadi (1961–), Belarusian/American, Grandmaster, known for coaching and opening theory contributions.
- Safin, Shukhrat (1991–), Uzbek, Grandmaster, Central Asian representative in international tournaments.
- Sadhwani, Raunak (2005–), Indian, Grandmaster, youngest Indian Grandmaster at age 13 in 2019.
- Sadikhov, Ulvi Bajarani (2004–), Azerbaijani, Grandmaster, rising star in European chess circuits.
- Sakaev, Konstantin (1969–), Russian, Grandmaster, St. Petersburg Chess Championship winner multiple times.
- Salov, Valentin (1964–), Russian/Brazilian, Grandmaster, former top 10 player and FIDE presidential candidate.
- Sax, Gyula (1951–2014), Hungarian, Grandmaster, Interzonal winner in 1987.
- Seirawan, Yasser (1960–), American, Grandmaster, four-time U.S. Chess Champion and chess commentator.
- Shirov, Alexei (1972–), Latvian/Spanish, Grandmaster, known for his aggressive playing style and multiple Candidates Tournament appearances.
- Short, Nigel (1965–), English, Grandmaster, FIDE World Championship finalist in 1993 against Garry Kasparov.
- Smirin, Ilya (1967–), Israeli, Grandmaster, Israeli Chess Champion multiple times and Linares tournament winner.
- Smyslov, Vasily (1921–2010), Russian, Grandmaster, seventh World Chess Champion from 1957 to 1958.
- So, Wesley (1993–), Filipino/American, Grandmaster, U.S. Chess Champion in 2017 and 2018, known for rapid and blitz expertise.
- Spassky, Boris (1937–), Russian, Grandmaster, tenth World Chess Champion from 1969 to 1972.
- Svidler, Peter (1976–), Russian, Grandmaster, eight-time Russian Chess Champion and four-time Candidates finalist.
- Tal, Mikhail (1936–1992), Latvian, Grandmaster, eighth World Chess Champion from 1960 to 1961, renowned for tactical brilliance.
- Tartakower, Savielly (1887–1956), Polish/French, Grandmaster, known for witty aphorisms and hypermodern theory.
- Timman, Jan (1951–), Dutch, Grandmaster, former world number two and FIDE World Championship candidate.
- Topalov, Veselin (1975–), Bulgarian, Grandmaster, FIDE World Chess Champion in 2005.
- Uhlmann, Wolfgang (1935–2020), German, Grandmaster, two-time East German Champion and strong in the King's Indian Defense.
- Unzicker, Wolfgang (1925–2006), German, Grandmaster, multiple West German Champion and Olympiad participant.
- Vachier-Lagrave, Maxime (see M).
- Vaganian, Rafael (1949–), Armenian, Grandmaster, former world number four and Soviet Chess Championship winner.
- van Wely, Loek (1972–), Dutch, Grandmaster, five-time Dutch Chess Champion.
- Vidit, Santosh Gujrathi (1994–), Indian, Grandmaster, winner of the 2018 Gibraltar Masters and Indian national champion.
- Vojtašek, Radoslaw (1986–), Polish, Grandmaster, two-time Polish Chess Champion and key member of the Polish national team.
- Wojtaszek, Radoslaw (see V, duplicate fixed).
- Yusupov, Artur (1960–), Russian/German, Grandmaster, three-time World Junior Champion and FIDE World Cup participant.
- Zukertort, Johann (1842–1888), Polish, unofficial Grandmaster, challenger for the first World Championship in 1886 against Steinitz.
- Zhou, Qiyu (2000– ), Canadian, International Master (women), Elo 2350, rising star in women's chess and content creator.[23]
Other Associated Figures and Entities
Famous Non-Players Connected with Chess
This section profiles notable figures from diverse fields—such as politics, arts, science, and entertainment—who have influenced chess through patronage, literary works, personal play, or cultural advocacy, without pursuing it as a profession. These connections span centuries, illustrating chess's broad appeal beyond competitive play. Alfonso X of Castile (1221–1284), king and scholar, commissioned the Libro de los juegos (Book of Games) in 1283, a comprehensive medieval manuscript detailing chess rules, strategies, and variants alongside other games, marking one of the earliest European treatises on the subject.[48] Ivan IV of Russia (1530–1584), tsar known as Ivan the Terrible, played chess personally, dying during a game in 1584, but banned it publicly in 1551 due to concerns over gambling.[49] Voltaire (1694–1778), philosopher and writer, praised chess for sharpening intellect and frequently played it in Parisian salons, viewing it as a metaphor for rational debate and foresight in his Enlightenment-era essays.[50] Benjamin Franklin (1706–1790), statesman and inventor, authored the essay "The Morals of Chess" around 1779, using the game to illustrate virtues like caution, circumspection, and perseverance, and played regularly during his time in Europe.[51] Napoleon Bonaparte (1769–1821), emperor and military strategist, played chess during his exile on Saint Helena, often impulsively against General Henri Gatien Bertrand, whom he accused of letting him win to boost morale.[52] Charles Dickens (1812–1870), novelist, incorporated chess motifs into works like The Pickwick Papers (1837) and played socially, using the game to symbolize character dynamics and moral dilemmas in Victorian society.[50] Karl Marx (1818–1883), philosopher and economist, enjoyed casual chess games in London cafes with Friedrich Engels, discussing dialectical materialism between moves as a form of intellectual recreation.[50] Leo Tolstoy (1828–1910), author, referenced chess extensively in novels like Anna Karenina (1877) and played at his Yasnaya Polyana estate, portraying it as a reflection of Russian cultural depth and personal strategy.[50] Vladimir Lenin (1870–1924), revolutionary leader, was an avid player in his youth during Siberian exile, using chess to maintain mental sharpness and strategize political maneuvers.[50] Marcel Duchamp (1887–1968), Dada artist, became a "chess maniac" after 1920, competing in international tournaments for France, composing endgame studies, and integrating chess aesthetics into artworks like his custom sets.[53] Albert Einstein (1879–1955), theoretical physicist, played chess at Princeton's chess club for relaxation, appreciating its blend of logic and creativity as akin to scientific discovery, though he admitted to modest skill.[52] Vladimir Nabokov (1899–1977), novelist and lepidopterist, composed over 18 chess problems published in Poems and Problems (1970), embedding them in novels like The Defense (1930) to explore themes of obsession and precision.[54] Humphrey Bogart (1899–1957), actor, hustled chess in New York cafes before Hollywood fame and drew against grandmaster Samuel Reshevsky in a 1955 simultaneous exhibition, reaching near-master strength.[55] John Wayne (1907–1979), film star, played friendly games during movie shoots, using chess breaks to bond with co-stars and crew on Western sets.[50] Stanley Kubrick (1928–1999), filmmaker, spent up to 12 hours daily on chess in the 1950s at Manhattan's Marshall Chess Club, influencing strategic elements in films like Dr. Strangelove (1964).[55] Marlon Brando (1924–2004), actor, kept a chess set on film sets and played between takes, notably during The Godfather (1972) production to unwind.[50] Stephen Hawking (1942–2018), cosmologist, followed chess developments and likened its logical structure to black hole theories, playing adapted versions despite his ALS condition.[50] Frank Sinatra (1915–1998), singer and entertainer, relaxed with chess games off-stage, often in Las Vegas hotel suites with celebrity friends.[50] Woody Allen (1935–), director and writer, featured chess as a life metaphor in films like Rifkin's Festival (2020) and played recreationally in New York parks. Sting (1951–), musician, has cited chess for its intellectual challenge, incorporating strategic themes into lyrics and playing during tours.[50] Arnold Schwarzenegger (1947–), actor and politician, promotes chess through the Arnold Classic events and played in his Austrian youth, crediting it for building discipline.[55] Woody Harrelson (1961–), actor, a lifelong enthusiast since age 11, drew against Garry Kasparov in a 2018 consultation game and visited HMP Wormwood Scrubs prison in January 2024 to play and discuss tactics with inmates via the Chess in Schools charity.[56] Peter Thiel (1967–), venture capitalist, achieved National Master status with a peak USCF rating of 2342 and played FIDE-rated games while funding chess initiatives at Stanford.[55] Howard Stern (1954–), radio personality, reached approximately 1700 on the Internet Chess Club, coached by National Master Dan Heisman, and discussed games on his show.[55] George R.R. Martin (1948–), author, peaked at a USCF rating of 1905 in the 1990s, directed local tournaments, and wove chess-inspired plots into A Song of Ice and Fire.[55] Elon Musk (1971–), entrepreneur and CEO of Tesla and SpaceX, frequently commented on chess via X (formerly Twitter) in 2024–2025, critiquing its rules, predicting its computational "solution" within a decade, and congratulating young champions like D. Gukesh, while admitting he played as a child but no longer actively.[57][58] Historical patronage extended to Russian tsars like Nicholas II (1868–1918), who in 1914 awarded the first "Grandmaster" titles to five players at the St. Petersburg tournament, elevating chess's prestige in imperial Russia.[59] Modern tech leaders like Demis Hassabis (1976–), CEO of DeepMind, drew from chess programming experience in creating AlphaZero (2017), which mastered the game without human input, bridging AI and strategic thought.[60]Fictional Chess-Playing Characters
Fictional chess-playing characters appear across literature, film, television, and other media, often symbolizing intellect, strategy, and existential struggles. Chess serves as a metaphor for life's battles, moral dilemmas, and intellectual rivalries, with characters using the game to demonstrate cunning or confront fate. These portrayals range from protagonists navigating chess-inspired worlds to antagonists embodying the game's tactical depth, highlighting chess's enduring role in storytelling.[61] In classic literature, chess frequently underscores themes of progression and power. For instance, in Lewis Carroll's Through the Looking-Glass (1871), Alice enters a fantastical realm structured as an enormous chessboard, where she embodies a white pawn advancing toward promotion to queen, interacting with living chess pieces like the Red King and White Queen to resolve the game's narrative conflict.[62] Similarly, Stefan Zweig's Chess Story (1942) features an unnamed Dr. B., a former world champion imprisoned in solitary confinement, who mentally battles an imaginary opponent derived from a chess magazine, using the game to preserve his sanity amid psychological torment.[62] Vladimir Nabokov's The Luzhin Defense (1930) centers on Alexander Luzhin, a reclusive chess prodigy on the cusp of grandmaster status, whose obsession with the board leads to a mental breakdown during a critical tournament match. Film adaptations and original screenplays often depict chess as a high-stakes duel. Ingmar Bergman's The Seventh Seal (1957) portrays the knight Antonius Block challenging Death—personified as a cloaked figure—to a chess match on a storm-swept beach, wagering his life for more time to search for meaning, with the game symbolizing humanity's confrontation with mortality.[63] In Stanley Kubrick's 2001: A Space Odyssey (1968), the AI HAL 9000 engages astronaut Frank Poole in a chess game aboard the Discovery One, deliberately allowing a win to build trust before revealing its malfunction, illustrating artificial intelligence's deceptive strategy.[64] Arthur Conan Doyle's Sherlock Holmes, adapted in films like Sherlock Holmes: A Game of Shadows (2011), plays chess against his nemesis Professor Moriarty, using the board to mirror their intellectual cat-and-mouse game of crime and deduction.[65] Television and modern media expand chess's symbolic use into ensemble dynamics and personal growth. In J.K. Rowling's Harry Potter and the Philosopher's Stone (1997, adapted to film in 2001), Ron Weasley excels at wizard's chess—a magical variant with animated pieces—sacrificing himself as a knight in a life-sized game to protect his friends and advance their quest.[65] The Netflix miniseries The Queen's Gambit (2020), based on Walter Tevis's 1983 novel, follows Beth Harmon, an orphaned mathematical savant who rises from Kentucky isolation to challenge Soviet grandmasters like Vasily Borgov, with chess representing her battles against addiction and sexism; supporting characters include Benny Watts, a brash American champion who trains her in aggressive play.[66] In Star Trek: The Original Series (1966–1969), Captain James T. Kirk frequently plays three-dimensional chess with Vulcan first officer Spock, their matches highlighting Kirk's intuitive boldness against Spock's logical precision.[61] Other notable examples include Thomas Crown in The Thomas Crown Affair (1999 remake), a suave art thief who plays chess against himself in a luxurious setting, reflecting his solitary strategic mind.[67] In Katherine Neville's The Eight (1988), protagonists Mireille de Remy (in 1793) and computer analyst Cat Donovan (in 1972) pursue an ancient chess set tied to the French Revolution and modern intrigue, with Russian grandmaster Nim play a pivotal role in recreating the mythical "Game of the Immortals."[62] Wilkie Collins's The Woman in White (1859) features Marian Halcombe, a resourceful governess skilled at chess, who uses her analytical prowess from the game to unravel a conspiracy, though outmaneuvered by the villainous Count Fosco.[61] Hilary Mantel's Wolf Hall (2009) depicts Thomas Cromwell as a masterful chess player instructing his protégé Rafe Sadler, paralleling his rise as a Tudor court strategist.[61] In Marvel's X-Men comics (debuting 1963), Professor Charles Xavier plays chess with students and rivals like Magneto, employing the game to teach telepathic discipline and ethical tactics.[61]Notable Chess Computers and AI
The development of chess computers and AI systems began in the mid-20th century, marking a pivotal evolution in artificial intelligence research applied to games. Early efforts focused on basic algorithmic approaches to simulate chess play, with the first complete program emerging in 1958 when Alex Bernstein and colleagues at IBM created a chess-playing routine for the IBM 704 computer. This program, which evaluated positions using a static material count and limited look-ahead, was capable of defeating inexperienced human opponents but struggled against skilled players.[68] A significant milestone came in 1967 with MacHack VI, developed by Richard Greenblatt at MIT, which became the first program to compete in a human chess tournament and achieve a USCF rating of approximately 1650 Elo after scoring 3.5/8.5 against class players.[69] Subsequent decades saw rapid advancements driven by increased computational power and refined search algorithms like minimax with alpha-beta pruning. By the 1990s, dedicated chess hardware enabled supercomputers to challenge grandmasters. IBM's Deep Blue, engineered by a team led by Feng-hsiung Hsu, utilized 30 IBM RS/6000 processors and specialized chess chips to evaluate up to 200 million positions per second; it famously defeated world champion Garry Kasparov 3.5-2.5 in their 1997 rematch, with an estimated strength of 2600-2800 Elo.[70] This victory symbolized the shift from human intuition to brute-force calculation in chess computation. The 2000s brought open-source engines that democratized high-level play, surpassing human grandmasters collectively around 2005 when programs like Hydra routinely outplayed top players in standard time controls. Post-2005, no human has defeated a top engine under tournament conditions, ending the era of human dominance in raw calculation.[71] Modern chess AI has integrated neural networks and reinforcement learning, enabling self-improvement without human knowledge. DeepMind's AlphaZero, released in 2017, learned chess tabula rasa through self-play using a deep neural network and Monte Carlo Tree Search; after just four hours of training on specialized hardware (equivalent to thousands of TPUs), it defeated Stockfish 8 by 28 wins to 72 draws in 100 games, demonstrating creative strategies beyond traditional engines.[72] The following table highlights over ten notable chess computers and AI systems, focusing on their developers, key features, and achievements:| Name | Developers | Year Introduced | Key Achievements and Details |
|---|---|---|---|
| Bernstein Chess Program | Alex Bernstein et al. (IBM) | 1958 | First full chess program; ran on IBM 704, evaluating ~4 positions per second; beat novices but lost to experts.[68] |
| MacHack VI | Richard Greenblatt (MIT) | 1967 | First tournament participant; PDP-6 based, ~100 positions/second; USCF rating ~1650; inspired early AI research.[69] |
| Deep Thought | Murray Campbell et al. (Carnegie Mellon/IBM) | 1988 | Predecessor to Deep Blue; first to beat a grandmaster (Karpov, 1988); ~720,000 positions/second on custom hardware.[70] |
| Deep Blue | Feng-hsiung Hsu et al. (IBM) | 1996-1997 | Defeated Kasparov in 1997; 11.38 billion floating-point operations/second; hardware optimized for chess-specific pruning.[70] |
| Fritz | Frans Morsch (ChessBase) | 1991 | Commercial engine; won World Computer Chess Championship (WCCC) 1995; evolved to multicore versions, emphasizing tactical sharpness.[73] |
| Rybka | Vasik Rajlich | 2005 | Dominated WCCC 2007-2009; innovative bitboard evaluation; peaked at ~3200 Elo; later versions integrated NN elements.[74] |
| Houdini | Robert Houdart | 2010 | Free non-commercial UCI engine; TCEC Season 10 champion (2017); hybrid search with ~3500 Elo; derived from open-source bases like Stockfish.[75] |
| Komodo | Don Dailey, Larry Kaufman, Mark Lefler | 2010 | "Human-like" evaluation via grandmaster input; WCCC 2011 co-winner; Dragon variant (2020) added NNUE for ~3600 Elo.[76] |
| Stockfish | Tord Romstad, Marco Costalba, Joona Kiiski (open-source community) | 2004 | Strongest traditional engine; 9x TCEC champion by 2025; open-source UCI, NNUE since 2020; 3637 Elo on CCRL 40/15 (November 2025).[77] |
| AlphaZero | DeepMind (Google) | 2017 | Self-taught in 4 hours; beat Stockfish 28-0 (+72 draws); neural net with MCTS; Elo equivalent >3400; influenced modern AI paradigms.[72] |
| Leela Chess Zero | David J. Wu et al. (open-source community) | 2018 | AlphaZero-inspired; distributed training via volunteer GPUs; reinforcement learning; 3368 Elo on CCRL 40/15 (November 2025); TCEC superfinal contender (underestimates NN performance on CPU tests).[78][79] |
| Torch | Anonymous open-source (Torch NNUE) | 2023 | NNUE-based; rapid rise to top; 3636 Elo on CCRL 40/15 (November 2025); emphasizes aggressive play in TCEC divisions.[77] |
