U.S. Chess Mates - Alexander Alekhin
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Full name: Alexander Alexandrovich Alekhine
Country: Russia France
Born: October 31 or November 1, 1892 Moscow, Russia
Died: March 24, 1946 Estoril, Portugal
Title: Grandmaster
World Champion:
1927-1935
1937-1946
Alexander Alexandrovich Alekhine (sometimes spelled "Aljechin or Alechin") other members of his family pronounce it
Russian: Александр Александрович Алéхин; French: Alexandre Alekhine)
He was a Russian-born naturalized French chess grandmaster (officially naturalized in 1927 only three days before the World
Champion title), and the fourth World Chess Champion. He was known for his fierce and imaginative attacking style.
Early life
Alekhine was born into a wealthy family in Moscow, Russia. His father Alexander Ivanovich Alekhine was a landowner, and
Privy Councillor to the conservative legislative Fourth Duma, according to Denker and Parr (The Bobby Fischer I Knew And
Other Stories). His mother, Anisya Ivanovna Alekhina (née Prokhorova), was the daughter of a rich industrialist. Alekhine was
first introduced to chess by his mother, an older brother Alexei, and an older sister Varvara.
Early chess career (1902-1914)
Alekhine's first known game was from a correspondence tournament that began on December 3, 1902. He participated in
several correspondence chess tournaments, sponsored by Shakhmatnoe Obozrenie chess magazine, in 1902-1911. In
Autumn 1907, Alexander, at the age of 14, tied for 11th-13th at Moscow. His older brother, Alexei, tied for 4th-6th place. In
Spring 1908, Alekhine won at Moscow. In August 1908, he took 4th-5th at Düsseldorf 'B'. In August 1908, he defeated Curt von
Bardeleben in a match at Düsseldorf. In September 1908, he drew a match with Hans Fahrni at Munich. In October 1908, he
won a match with Benjamin Blumenfeld at Moscow. In October 1908, he lost a match against Vladimir Nenarokov at Moscow
(+0 –3 =0). In January 1909, he won at Moscow. In February 1909, he won at St. Petersburg (the All Russian Amateur
Tournament). In August 1909, he won a tournament at Sevastopol. In March 1910, he won at Moscow. In July-August, 1910, he
tied for 7th-8th at Hamburg. The event was won by Carl Schlechter. In May 1911, he won at Moscow. In August-September
1911, he took 8th-11th at Karlsbad. The event was won by Richard Teichmann. In February 1912, he won at St. Petersburg. In
July, 1912 he won at Stockholm (8th Nordic-ch). In August-September 1912, he tied for 6th-7th at Vilna (Wilno, Vilnius), the All
Russian Masters Tournament. The event was won by Akiba Rubinstein. In February-March 1913, he defeated Stepan Levitsky
in a match with seven wins and three losses. In April 1913, he tied for 1st with Grigory Levenfish in the St. Petersburg
(Quadrangular). In August 1913, he won at Scheveningen. In 1913, he defeated Edward Lasker in a match with three wins at
Paris / London. In December 1913, Alekhine lost in an exhibition match against Jose Raul Capablanca at St. Petersburg (+0
–2 =0). In January 1914, he won his first major Russian tournament, when he tied for first place with Aron Nimzowitsch at St.
Petersburg, the All Russian Masters Tournament. Afterwards, they drew in a mini-match for first prize (+1 –1 =0).
Top level grandmaster (1914-1927)
In April-May 1914, another major tournament was held in St. Petersburg in which he took third place behind Emanuel Lasker
and Jose Raul Capablanca. Czar Nicholas II conferred the title "Grandmaster of Chess" to Emanuel Lasker, Capablanca,
Alekhine, Siegbert Tarrasch, and Frank James Marshall, after they took the top five places at St. Petersburg. In July 1914,
Alekhine tied for first with Frank James Marshall at Paris.
World War I
In July-August of 1914 Alekhine was leading an international chess tournament, the 19th German Chess Federation (DSB)
Congress in Mannheim, Germany, with nine wins, one draw and one loss, when World War I broke out. He and all the other
Russian players were taken to Rastatt, Germany as prisoners of war. Alekhine feigned madness, and the Germans released
him as unfit for military service on September 14, 1914. He made his way back to Russia (via Switzerland, Italy, London,
Stockholm, and Finland). When Alekhine arrived back in Russia, he helped raise money to aid the Russian chess players who
were still interned in Germany by giving simultaneous exhibitions. In 1915/16 Alekhine won at Moscow. In May, 1916, Alekhine
served in the Union of Cities (Red Cross) on the Austrian front. In September 1916, he was playing five people in a blindfold
display at a Russian military hospital at Tarnopol. In 1916, Alekhine won a mini-match against Alexander Evensohn with two
wins and one loss at Kiev. In 1918, Alekhine won at Moscow (Triangular). In June 1919, Alekhine was briefly imprisoned in
Odessa's death cell by the Odessa Cheka, suspected of being a spy. He was charged with links with White counter-
intelligence, after the Russians liberated the Ukraine from German occupation. Rumors appeared in the West that Alekhine
had been killed by the Bolesheviks. In January 1920, he won the Moscow City Championship (eleven wins out of eleven
games). In October 1920, Alekhine won the first USSR (retro-actively) chess championship (All-Russian Chess Olympiad) in
Moscow (+9 –0 =6). His brother Alexei took third place in the tournament for amateurs.
Leaves Russia for France
In 1920 Alekhine married a Russian baroness, Sewerin. For a short time in 1920-1921, he worked as an interpreter for the
Communist International (Komintern). In this capacity, he met a Swiss woman journalist and Comintern delegate Anneliese
Rüegg (Annalisa Ruegg). Alekhine was also secretary of the Communist Education Department. On March 15, 1921, he
married Anneliese Ruegg. In June 1921, Alekhine abandoned his second wife in Paris and went to Berlin; he never returned to
Russia. Four years later, he became a French citizen and entered the Sorbonne Faculty of law. Although his thesis on the
Chinese prison system went uncompleted, he nevertheless claimed the title of "Dr Alekhine". In 1927 he married for the third
time, to Nadezda Vasiliev (Nadezhda Vasilieff).
Post-war chess
In 1921-1923 Alekhine played seven mini-matches. In 1921, he won against Nikolay Grigoriev (+2 –0 =5) in Moscow, drew with
Richard Teichmann (+2 –2 =2) and won against Friedrich Sämisch (+2 –0 =0), both in Berlin. In 1922, he won against Ossip
Bernstein in Paris (+1 –0 =1), and Manuel Golmayo in Madrid (+1 –0 =1). In 1923, he won against Arnold Aurbach (+1 –0 =1)
and Andre Muffang (+2 –0 =0) in Paris.
From 1921 to 1927, Alekhine amassed an excellent tournament record, winning or sharing fourteen out of twenty-two first
prizes in the tournaments he played. In July 1921, he won at Triberg. In September 1921, he won at Budapest. In October
1921, he won at The Hague. In April 1922, he took 2nd-3rd at Pistyan (Breyer Memorial). In August 1922, he took second place,
behind José Raúl Capablanca, at London. In September 1922, he won, ahead of Akiba Rubinstein, at Hastings. In November
1922, he took 4th-6th at Vienna. In April 1923, he took 2nd-5th at Margate. In May 1923, he tied for first place with Efim
Bogoljubow and Geza Maroczy, at Karlsbad. In August 1923, he won at Portsmouth. In April 1924, he took third place, behind
Emanuel Lasker and José Raúl Capablanca, at New York. In February 1925, he won at Paris. In March 1925, he won at Bern.
In May 1925, he won at Baden-Baden. In 1925/26, he tied for first with Milan Vidmar, at Hastings. In March 1926, he took
second place, behind Rudolf Spielmann, at Semmering. In April 1926, he took second, behind Aron Nimzowitsch, at Dresden.
In May 1926, he won at Scarborough. In June 1926, he won at Birmingham. In October 1926, he won at Buenos Aires. In
1926/27, he won a match against Max Euwe, played in various Dutch cities (+3 –2 =5). In March 1927, Alekhine took second,
behind José Raúl Capablanca, at New York. In July 1927, he won at Kecskemet.
World Chess Champion, first reign (1927-35)
In September–November 1927 at Buenos Aires, Alekhine won the title of World chess champion from José Raúl Capablanca,
to the surprise of almost the entire chess world. Alekhine defeated Capablanca with six wins, twenty-five draws, and three
losses. Going into the match, Alekhine had never won a single game from Capablanca.
After the world championship match, Alekhine returned to Paris and spoke against Bolshevism. Afterwards, Nikolai Krylenko,
president of the Soviet Chess Federation, published an official memorandum stating that Alekhine was the enemy of the
Soviets, and should be treated as an enemy. The Soviet Chess Federation broke all contact with Alexander Alekhine until the
end of the 1930s. By 1939, the Soviets killed his older brother Alexei Alekhine in Russia.
Although Capablanca was clearly the leading challenger, Alekhine carefully avoided granting a re-match, although a right to a
re-match was part of the agreement. Alekhine also managed to arrange that he and Capablanca did not play in the same
tournaments for the next several years. Alekhine avoided Capablanca by insisting that the winner get $10,000 in gold, just as
he got in Buenos Aires. But after the stock market crash, there were no backers.
Instead, Alekhine played matches with Efim Bogoljubow, an official "Champion of FIDE", in 1929 and 1934, winning handily
both times. The first match with Efim Bogoljubow was held at Wiesbaden, Heidelberg, Berlin, The Hague, and Amsterdam
from September through November, 1929. Alekhine won with eleven wins, nine draws, and five losses.
Alekhine traveled the world giving simultaneous exhibitions, including Hawaii, Manila, Singapore, Shanghai, Hong Kong, and
the Dutch East Indies. He was made an honorary Colonel in the Mexican army and appointed as chess instructor for the
Mexican army. In July 1933, Alekhine played thirty-two people blindfold simultaneously in Chicago, winning nineteen, drawing
nine, and losing four games. This was a new world record.
After defeating Capablanca, Alekhine dominated chess for quite some time. He lost only seven out of 238 games in
tournament play from 1927 through 1935. In June 1929, he won in Bradley Beach. In February 1930, he won in San Remo (+13
–0 =2), ahead of Aron Nimzowitsch by a margin of 3½ points. In April 1931, he won a consultation tournament in Nice. In
September 1931, he won at Bled (+15 –0 =11). He won by a margin of 5½ points (!) over his nearest rival (Bogoljubow). In
February 1932, he won at London. In March 1932, he tied for first-third in Bern (Quadrangular). In July 1932, he won the 36th
Swiss Championship at Bern. In August 1932, he won in Pasadena. In October 1932, he tied for first with Isaac Kashdan in
Mexico City. In 1933, he won an exhibition match against Rafael Cintron in San Juan, Puerto Rico (+4 –0 =0). In October 1933,
he won in Paris, and next he drew a match with Ossip Bernstein in Paris (+1 –1 =2). In January 1934, he tied for second, with
Andor Lilienthal, in Hastings 1933/34. The event was won by Salo Flohr. In February 1934, Alekhine won in Rotterdam
(Quadrangular).
From April to June 1934, Alekhine faced Bogoljubow again in a title match, defeating him by (+8 -3 =15), as the match was
held in twelve German cities. In July 1934, he won the 37th Swiss Championship in Zurich. In April 1935, Alekhine won at
Orebro.
Alekhine played five times at Chess Olympiads on board one for France. In July 1930, at the 3rd Chess Olympiad at Hamburg,
he scored his first 100 percent score when he won all nine games. In July 1931, at the 4th Chess Olympiad at Prague (+10 –1
=7). His loss to Latvian master Hermanis Matisons was his first loss in a serious chess event since winning the world
championship. In June 1933, at the 5th Chess Olympiad at Folkestone, he scored (+8 –1 =3). He lost one game to Saviely
Tartakower. In August 1935, at the 6th Chess Olympiad at Warsaw, he scored (+7 –0 =10). In August-September 1939, at the
8th Chess Olympiad at Buenos Aires, he scored (+9 –0 =7). Altogether, Alekhine scored +43, -2, =27 in 72 Olympiad games,
for a superb 78.5 per cent.
Loses World title (1935-1937)
Alekhine then accepted a challenge from Max Euwe. On October 3, 1935 the world championship match between Dr Alekhine
and Dr Euwe began in Zandvoort, The Netherlands. On December 15, 1935 Max Euwe won with nine wins, thirteen draws, and
eight losses. This was the first world championship match to officially have seconds. Alekhine had the services of Salo
Landau, and Euwe had Geza Maroczy. The loss is largely attributed to Alekhine's alcoholism as also corroborated by some
players. In 1935 Alekhine married for the fourth time, to Grace Freeman Wishaar (Wishard, Wishart, Wishar), a lady sixteen
years older than he. She was an American-born widow of a British tea-planter in Ceylon. She retained her British citizenship to
the end of her life.
Alekhine played in ten tournaments after losing the title. In May 1936, he tied for first with Paul Keres at Bad Nauheim. In June
1936, he won at Dresden. In July 1936, he took second, behind Salo Flohr, at Poděbrady. In August 1936, he took sixth, behind
Capablanca, Mikhail Botvinnik, Reuben Fine, Samuel Reshevsky, and Euwe, at Nottingham. In October 1936, he took third,
behind Euwe and Fine, at Amsterdam, and tied for 1st with Salo Landau at Amsterdam (Quadrangular). In 1936/37, he won,
ahead of Fine and Erich Eliskases, at Hastings. In March 1937, he won at Nice (Quadrangular). In April 1937, he took third,
behind Keres and Fine at Margate. In June–July 1937, he tied for fourth with Keres, behind Flohr, Reshevsky and Vladimirs
Petrovs, at Kemeri. In July 1937, he tied for second with Bogoljubow, behind Euwe, at Bad Nauheim (Quadrangular).
World Chess Champion, second reign (1937-46)
Alekhine gave up alcohol and regained the title from Max Euwe in December 1937 by a large margin (+10 –4 =11). In this
return match, held in the Netherlands, Euwe was seconded by Reuben Fine, and Alekhine by Erich Eliskases. Alekhine played
no more title matches, so he held the title until his death.
In March 1938 Alekhine won at Carrasco in Montevideo. In April 1938, he won at Margate. In September 1938, he tied for 1st
with Sir George Alan Thomas in Plymouth. In November 1938, he tied for 4-6th with Max Euwe and Samuel Reshevsky, behind
Paul Keres, Reuben Fine, and Mikhail Botvinnik, but ahead of José Raúl Capablanca and Salo Flohr, at the AVRO tournament,
the Netherlands.
Alekhine was representing France on board 1 at the chess Olympiad in Buenos Aires when World War II broke out. He, as a
captain of the French team, and Saviely Tartakower, as a captain of the Polish team, refused to allow their teams to play
Germany. In September 1939, Alekhine won a tournament at Montevideo, afterward he won at Caracas.
Supported by Latin-American financial pledges, José Raul Capablanca challenged Alexander Alekhine to a world title match in
November. Tentative plans not, however, actually backed by a deposit of the required purse ($10,000 in gold), led to a virtual
agreement to play at Buenos Aires, Argentina beginning April 14, 1940. In January 1940, Alekhine returned to Europe, staying
first in Portugal. He later moved to France to enlist in the army, and became an interpreter.
When France was overrun, he tried to go to America by travelling to Lisbon and applying for an American visa. To protect his
wife, Grace Wishard, who was an American Jew, and her French assets (a castle at Saint Aubin-le-Cauf, near Dieppe, which
the Nazis looted), he agreed to cooperate with the Nazis.[3] In March 1941, Alekhine signed six articles critical of Jewish chess
players. He argued that there was a Jewish way of playing chess (cowardly), and an Aryan way of playing chess (aggressive
and brave). He mentioned that the representatives of Aryan chess included Philidor, Labourdonnais, Anderssen, Morphy,
Tchigorin, Pillsbury, Marshall, Capablanca, Bogoljubow, Euwe, Eliskases, and Keres. For Jewish players, there were
Kieseritzky, Steinitz, Lasker, Janowski, Rubinstein, Nimzowitsch, Reti, Spielmann, Flohr, Fine, Reshevsky, and Botvinnik.
Alekhine took part in chess tournaments in Munich, Salzburg, Krakow / Warsaw, and Prague, organized by Ehrhardt Post, a
President of Nazi Grossdeutscher Schachbund. In September 1941, he tied for second-third with Erik Lundin in Munich (2nd
Europa Tournament). The event was won by Gösta Stoltz. In October 1941, he tied for first with Paul Felix Schmidt at Krakow /
Warsaw (2nd GG Tournament). In December 1941, he won in Madrid. In 1941, he won a mini-match with Lopez Esnaola in
Vitoria. In June 1942, he won in Salzburg. In September 1942, he won in Munich (Europameisterschaft – styled the '1st
European Championship' though it had no official recognition).[4],[5] In October 1942, he won at Warsaw/Lublin/Krakow (3rd
GG Tournament). In December 1942, he tied for first with Klaus Junge in Prague (Duras Memorial). In March 1943, he drew a
mini-match (+1 –1 =0) with Efim Bogoljubow in Warsaw. In April 1943, he won in Prague. In June 1943, he tied for 1st with
Paul Keres in Salzburg.
By late 1943, Alekhine was spending all of his time in Spain and Portugal, as the German representative to chess events. This
also allowed him to get away from the onrushing Soviet invasion into eastern Europe.
In April 1944, he narrowly won a match against Ramón Rey Ardid in Zaragoza (+1 –0 =3). In July 1944, he won in Gijon, with 7.5
/8. In March 1945, he won at Madrid, with 8.5/9. In July 1945, he tied for 2nd-3rd with Antonio Medina, with 6.5/9, in Gijón; the
event was won by Antonio Rico with 8/9. In August 1945, he won in Sabadell, with 7.5/9. In August 1945, he tied for 1st with
Lopez Nunez in Almeria, with 5.5/8. In September 1945, he won in Melilla, with 6.5/7. In Autumn 1945, he took second in
Caceres, behind Francisco Lupi, with 3.5/5 (Lupi scored 4/5). Alekhine's last chess match was with Lupi at Estoril near
Lisbon, Portugal, in January, 1946. Alekhine won two games, lost one, and drew one.
Nazi controversy
During World War II, Alekhine played in several tournaments held in Germany or German-occupied territory. In 1941, a number
of anti-semitic articles entitled Aryan and Jewish Chess appeared under his name in the Pariser Zeitung. Extensive
investigations (see Whyld) have not yielded conclusive evidence of the authenticity of the articles, but, as British chess
historian Edward G. Winter writes:
Although, as things stand, it is difficult to construct much of a defence for Alekhine, only the discovery of the articles in his own
handwriting will settle the matter beyond all doubt.
After the war, Alekhine found that he was persona non grata to tournament organisers.
Alekhine apparently did not display anti-Semitism in his personal chess relationships with Jews. His second for the 1935
match with Euwe was the Master Salo Landau, a Dutch Jew. The American Jewish Grandmaster Arnold Denker, in The Bobby
Fischer I Knew And Other Stories (co-author Larry Parr), wrote that he found Alekhine very friendly in chess settings, with
productive analysis sessions and consultation games. Denker also wrote that Alekhine treated the younger and (at that
juncture) virtually unproven Denker to dinner on many occasions in New York during the 1930s, when the economy was very
weak because of the Great Depression. Denker added that Alekhine, during the early 1930s, opined that the American Jewish
Grandmaster Isaac Kashdan might be his next challenger (this did not in fact occur). Alekhine also married an American Jew,
Grace Wishart, as his fourth wife.
Death
After World War II, Alekhine was not invited to chess tournaments outside the Iberian Peninsula, because of his alleged Nazi
affiliation. While planning for a World championship match against Botvinnik, he died in his hotel room in Estoril, Portugal. His
death, the circumstances of which are still a matter of debate, is thought to have been caused either by his choking on a piece
of meat, or by a heart attack (someone wrote a letter to Chess Life magazine, stating that they had actually witnessed the
autopsy, and that choking on meat was the actual cause of death). Some have speculated that he was murdered,.[8] possibly
by the KGB. His burial was sponsored by FIDE, and the remains were transferred to the Cimetière du Montparnasse, Paris,
France in 1956.[9],
Contributions
Alekhine was an avid student of the game. Several openings and opening variations are named after him. The Alekhine
Defence (1.e4 Nf6 in algebraic notation) is the most important. There is also the Alekhine-Chatard attack (1.e4 e6 2.d4 d5 3.
Nc3 Nf6 4.Bg5 Be7 5.e5 Nfd7 6.h4), a pawn sacrifice in the French Defence.
Many chess players were admirers of Alekhine's style, such as Max Euwe who said, "Alekhine … is a poet who creates a work
of art out of something that would hardly inspire another man to send home a picture post-card." Garry Kasparov said that
Alekhine was his early inspiration.
