Wednesday 30 November 2011

Chess Sets Online: The Three Phases Of Chess


 

The 32 chess set pieces represent material, one of three elements within a game of chess. The others are space or territory, represented by the 64 squares and time, represented by the moves.
 
Time can be divided into three main phases, namely the opening, the middle-game and the end-game.   In the opening of the chess game, both players are focused on developing their forces. The players then move on into the middle-game.  This is where the battle is at its height and their forces reduce.  That diminution of forces decreases the danger of a ‘mate’ during the end-game. However, during that phase, the opponents must take great care and precision over every move, as it is very easy to make mistakes and very hard to make amends for any unwise decisions.  For those who are interested in finding out more, it is worth looking more closely at some of the World champions to learn from their expertise in end-game play.
 
It is important to emphasise that there is no clear demarcation between the phases and the distinction between them is in no way clear-cut.  In some games, a sudden and early termination can stop the middle-game happening at all!
 
Increase your own enjoyment of chess by treating yourself to a carved chess set from the selection of chess sets for sale at ChessSetHeaven.com.
 
By Jillian Lovejoy

Tuesday 29 November 2011

Buy Chess Sets: Chess – A Game To Exercise The Mind


Buy a chess set and you can enter into an absorbing world of intellectual battles that stimulate your mind and tax your wits.

Chess has been likened to a real battle in which two kings, face to face, are surrounded by their respective armies. That is nonsense though as, in chess, the opposing sides start out as equal and chess set pieces operate in an ordered world of rules. Casualties of the game are not harmed – unless you are talking about the Wizard Chess depicted by JK Rowling in the world of Harry Potter.   

The word ‘Mate’ is Arabic and signifies (the King is) dead.  The object of every game of chess is to mate the adversary.  That means, capture the King or enforce surrender.  However, a King cannot be captured or place himself en prise (where he would be captured in the following move). Mate is therefore a position in which the King has to surrender, as the enemy would capture him on the next move.  Subtle tactics and mental exertions are required to get to that point and chess is the perfect way to keep your mind active.

So, buy a chess set for yourself or for friends and family. A great selection of themed chess sets is available at ChessSetHeaven.com so take a look now to find the best one for you.

By Jillian Lovejoy

Monday 28 November 2011

The Royal Chess Set Pieces




When it comes to chess set pieces, the King and Queen take centre stage.

Rules govern how and where each of the pieces can move. As befits his rank, the majestic King can move in any direction and only advances one square at a time. His majesty imposes on him a special restriction. He is not allowed to move onto a square where he would be en prise, which means where the opponent could capture him on his next move.

The Queen moves in the same direction as the King but without any restriction on distance. This lack of restriction was a favour afforded the King’s consort in the fifteenth century. It is interesting to note that, originally, this piece was not called the Queen, but a Minister. The Persians followed the Indians in becoming proficient at chess and the Minister in Persian was called a Vizier or Ferz. In the Latin of the Middle Ages this became Fercia, followed by the French Vierge, then finally, amongst those with Latin origins, Dame or Queen.

It is fascinating to see the way these royal chess set pieces have been interpreted in themed chess sets. If you are looking to find a set for your own use or as a gift that can be handed down through generations, visit ChessSetHeaven.com for a range of chess sets for sale that will suit you perfectly.

By Jill Lovejoy

Friday 25 November 2011

Chess Set Pieces: The History Of The Bishop


Among the other chess set pieces the bishop tends to be overlooked.
 
In the original version of the game, known as 'chaturanga', in India some 1500 years ago, the bishop was known as the elephant, or 'alfil.' It could leap two squares diagonally - even over another piece. No alfil could attack another.
 
The modern bishop seems to have first appeared around 1200AD but the word 'alfil' does still appear in some languages in modified form. Among the chess set pieces in Italy (alfiere), Spain (alfil) and France (aufin) the bishop still held its old name for some time.
 
The bishop was first named as such in the 1500s although the relevant piece in the Isle of Lewis chess set pieces dating from the 12th century is clearly an ecclesiastical figure. Indeed, Icelandic texts show the name 'biskup' as far back as the 1300s, which is consistent, as the Isle of Lewis chess set pieces are believed to be of Nordic origin.
 
The design of the piece reflects the bishop as shown in the standard Staunton chess set originally made in 1849, which is still the standard design today. Interestingly, the grooves carved into the bishop's mitre may reflect the origins of the piece as an elephant.
 
The history of this useful chess piece is further shown in the names still given to it in other languages. In France the bishop is known as the 'fou' or fool as the belief is the cap is similar to that of a jester. In Turkey and Russia the names given still mean 'the elephant.'   
 
It is fascinating how each of the chess set pieces has its own history. When you next buy a chess set you can imagine all the history it represents.


Looking to find the best chess set for your needs or as a gift that will never be forgotten? Visit ChessSetHeaven.com for a range of high quality themed chess sets that will suit you perfectly.

Thursday 24 November 2011

Buy Chess Sets: Chess In The Face of Defeat




So you get out your best chess set and challenge a friend to a game. Perhaps you lose or maybe your opponent does but whatever happens you will probably enjoy a game that challenges the mind and leaves you thinking more clearly.
 
Could this be why some leaders have been found pulling out their own best chess set and playing when all around them is crashing down?
 
In June this year, Libyan state television showed footage of Colonel Gadhafi playing chess against a visiting champion. This was of course just as his country was in the grip of a revolution. Perhaps diplomatically his opponent, Kirsan Ilyumzhinov, allowed Gadhafi to win but was the Colonel attempting to escape the disaster looming over him or was he trying to look as normal as possible?
 
Playing chess in the face of adversity has been reported before. In the year 762 AD the city of Baghdad was under siege and men were being killed by the hundred. Defeat seemed imminent but Muhammed al-Amin, the caliph of the Abbasid Empire, based on Baghdad, was calmly playing chess with one of his eunuchs.
 
Even urgent messengers arriving with news of yet another defeat would not disturb the game. Eventually the invading hordes broke into the room and the caliph was beheaded.
 
Serious chess players bent over their chess set pieces would perhaps have sympathy with the Colonel and with the caliph. It is very easy to be so absorbed in the chess set pieces that time and the world around you seems to fade away. 
 
See the video of Colonel Gadhafi playing perhaps his last game of chess in this video.


Looking to find the best chess set for your needs or as a gift that will never be forgotten? Visit ChessSetHeaven.com for a range of high quality themed chess sets that will suit you perfectly.

Wednesday 23 November 2011

Best Chess Set: Harry Potter And Wizard Chess




The game of chess and specific chess set pieces have featured in many examples of literature in the past. One of the most memorable uses of the game has been in the Harry Potter books and films.
 
Wizard Chess was invented by the author J.K. Rowling as a form of chess where the chess set pieces move of their own accord when commanded by the player. The rules are otherwise the same as the 'muggle' or non-magic human game.
 
Initially we see Harry playing with a borrowed chess set, which takes pity on his inexperience. Harry then gets his own chess set at Christmas.
 
Interestingly, the chess pieces used are based on the famous Isle of Lewis chess set dating from the Middle Ages and now displayed jointly in the British Museum and the Museum of Scotland in Edinburgh.
 
Perhaps the most dramatic display of Wizards Chess in the Harry Potter series is in the Philosophers Stone when Harry, Hermione and Ron have to play as chess set pieces to get to the Philosophers Stone itself. The game is that much more interesting as the pieces are destroyed when they are taken.
 
Perhaps it's just as well the game we all play is not so violent but it is enthralling nonetheless.
   
You can see a video of that dramatic game of Wizards chess here.  


Looking to find the best chess set for your needs or as a gift that will never be forgotten? Visit ChessSetHeaven.com for a range of high quality themed chess sets that will suit you perfectly.

Monday 14 November 2011

Chess Set Pieces: Winning The World Championship

 
 
 
How many of us have moved our chess set pieces in a game at home and dreamed of becoming a top player?
 
Here is an interesting video from Russian Ladies World Chess Champion Alexandra Kosteniuk on winning the 2008 world chess championship.
 
 
Alexandra's blog can be found at http://chessqueen.com.



Looking to find the best chess set for your needs or as a gift that will never be forgotten? Visit ChessSetHeaven.com for a range of high quality themed chess sets that will suit you perfectly and will make you feel like a champion.

Friday 11 November 2011

Chess Set Pieces: The Story Of The Rook




The 'Castle' or 'Rook' has been one of the chess set pieces since the earliest records of the game some 1500 years ago during the Gupta Empire in India.
 
The game was called Chaturanga (in Sanskrit) and the rook was first known as 'rukh' in Arabic.
 
Initially the rook was shown as a war carriage, which was an important constituent in the ancient Indian army. This representation of the rook chess set pieces was retained when the game was taken up in Arabia. The Arab name for this piece and the later Oriental names of 'xiangqi' and 'shoji' all mean 'chariot.'
 
The reason for the modern rook being universally shown as a turret is interesting. The war chariots in Persia were armored with a driver and an archer and were often designed to look like a turreted building to add to the impact on the battlefield.
 
In 1527 Vida, the Bishop of Albay (now in the Philippines), wrote a poem about chess and represented the rook with fortified platforms on the back of elephants. As the game moved westwards and elephants were less known, the rook chess set pieces dropped the elephant and just showed a crenellated fortification.
 
The rook became wholly connected to the idea of a tower as time progressed. Indeed, it is known as 'torre' in Italian, Portuguese and Spanish, 'toren' in Dutch, 'turm' in German and 'tour' in French: all meaning 'tower.' In English of course the piece is also known as the 'castle.'
 
Such an ancient game as chess was bound to have a fascinating history and the history of chess set pieces is also as interesting. Next time you play a game of chess, you might reflect on how the pieces developed.


Looking to find the best chess set for your needs or as a gift that will never be forgotten? 
Visit ChessSetHeaven.com for a range of high quality themed chess sets that will suit you perfectly.





Friday 4 November 2011

Chess Sets Online: Choose A Chess Set With Care




The game of chess is enthralling and teaches us so much about strategy and mental endurance but do you ever think about the chess set pieces with which you are playing?
 
Choosing the best chess set for your needs is probably more important than you realize.
 
Do you want an uninteresting chess set that is purely for playing the game of would you prefer a carved chess set depicting a period of history or perhaps your favorite literary characters?
 
Chess sets come in so many shapes and sizes so it is easy to get one that means something to you. Personally I love chess pieces that feel great in your hand and are beautifully carved: in short, a good chess set feels and looks great.
 
Heavy chess pieces somehow add something to the game of chess too. Lifting a nicely weighted rook or bishop feels more deliberate and special - try it and you will see what I mean.
 
Carefully carved chess pieces make a great conversation piece in the corner of a room, particularly if they are colorfully hand painted ones too! Each one is a work of art in it's own right and it is said that centuries ago individual chess pieces were indeed valued as ornaments in their own right.
 
What a great gift a chess set would make to someone this Christmas or for a birthday, especially if the theme of the set is something the recipient loves. Perhaps give a Sherlock Holmes themed set to a lover of those books or a set of Isle of Lewis chessmen to a history nut. The possibilities are virtually endless.
 
To find a range of beautifully carved and painted chess set pieces that will suit many tastes, why not visit ChessSetHeaven.com

Thursday 3 November 2011

Chess Store: Win At Chess With These Special Moves




By Lee Dobbins, http://ezinearticles.com/?expert=Lee_Dobbins

The game of chess has many interesting moves and some that can only happen under certain circumstances. In order to play the best game you can, it is wise to know about all the moves so that you can best outwit your opponent.

In order to effectively talk about chess a special method of notation has been devised. This helps identify the squares and positions without having to have a board and pieces always in front of you to illustrate. In this notation the columns (or files as they are called in chess) are identified with a letter and the rows (or ranks) are identified with a number. If you are looking at a chessboard from the perspective of the white player, the leftmost file is 'a', the one next to it 'b' and so on until the last file which is 'h'. The back or closest rank for white is 'rank 1', the next one (the one the pawns are on) is 'rank 2' and so on until the last rank, which is the back row for black and is 'rank 8'. So the when using chess notation, the leftmost back square for white would be called 'a1', the square directly above 'a2' an so on. See how easy that is?

Now that you know how chess notation works and you have a chess board visualized in your head, we can talk about some of the special chess moves.

En Passant

If you have played even only 1 game of chess you know that pawns have some special rules. For example, they can only capture a piece that is placed diagonally in front of them. Also, on it's initial move, a pawn can move up two squares instead of just one. However, there is a special case for this - if an enemy pawn could have captured it had it only moved 1 square, the enemy is still able to capture.
This move is called 'en passant' and can only be used on the very next move after the pawn is advanced 2 spaces - if you do not capture then, you cannot do it at a later move.

Here's an example - BLACK has a pawn at d4; WHITE moves his e2-pawn to e4; had WHITE moved to e3m the BLACK d4 pawn would have been able to capture so now he can capture en-passant on his next move. But if BLACK decides to make another move instead, he gives up his right to capture.

Castling

The King can make a special chess move called 'castling' and it is, in fact, recommended that you do this during the opening phase of the game. This is a defensive move which increase thesafety of the King. Castling has two forms - 'short' and 'long'. Here's how it works:

Say the white King is on e1 with the white Rook on h1 (this is the initial setup at the start of the game). You can make the move called short castling by moving the King to g1 and the Rook to f1. This move does have some restrictions - the squares in between the Rook and King must be empty, neither the Kind or Rook can have been moved before and the King cannot be in check. Note that even though you move two pieces, this is considered to be one move.

Long castling has the same rules and is a similar move but uses the Rook on the a file instead. In this scenario, the King ends on c1 and the Rook ends on d1.

Promotion

You might think the pawns are not very useful but if you can get your pawn to the other side of the board he can be promoted. This means the you can replace the pawn with any same colored piece you want with the exception of a king or pawn. Needless to say most people choose to replace the pawn with a queen.

There are some other situations in chess that novice players might not be aware of. For instance, a game can very easily end in a draw. This can happen when neither side has enough material to checkmate the opponent. This would happen if one player had a Bishop and King while another had only a King - no matter how many times you try you cannot get the opponent into checkmate so the game ends in a draw.

The chess game might also end in a draw if you have to repeat the same move 3 times as their are no other choices, if no advance or pawn capture has happened in the last 50 moves or stalemate. Stalemate can happen when a player who is not in check has no valid moves. If a player can continuously checkmate another player any time he wishes then he can claim a draw by "continuous check".

Lee Dobbins writes for many online publications. Visit http://www.chess-moves.info to learn more about the game of chess and see this article in more detail and with diagrams of the special moves.

Article Source: http://EzineArticles.com/?expert=Lee_Dobbins

http://EzineArticles.com/?Win-At-Chess-With-These-Special-Moves&id=214906


Looking to find the best chess set for your needs or as a gift that will never be forgotten? Visit ChessSetHeaven.com for a range of high quality themed chess sets that will suit you perfectly.