http://www.fide.com/fide/handbook.html? ... ew=article
I found at that address the FIDE official rules of chess.
Is there anywhere a timetable of the changes of rule that have happened since FIDE started?
In rule "Appendix D. Rules for play with blind and visually disabled players" it says that in play between blind players, or one blind and one sighted, when they announce moves to each other, they must announce in German. That is unexpected.
After I wrote that, I looked thru my old messages and found this link:-
http://chessarbitersassociation.co.uk/html/laws.html
But is there a specific description of the differences between successive versions?
Rules of chess
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Re: Rules of chess
It's been there for countless years. In my experience, games in the UK against British blind players are always announced in English.Anthony Appleyard wrote: In rule "Appendix D. Rules for play with blind and visually disabled players" it says that in play between blind players, or one blind and one sighted, when they announce moves to each other, they must announce in German. That is unexpected.
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Re: Rules of chess
My first (and so far only) experience of playing a blind opponent was at the London Classic a couple of years ago. Paired against a Polish lady who spoke no English, I (and presumably her other opponents) was asked to announce moves in German.Roger de Coverly wrote:It's been there for countless years. In my experience, games in the UK against British blind players are always announced in English.
My German is ropey to say the least, my chess-German non-existent. But we were given a crib sheet to help us with our Springers, Königs, Läufers and the like, plus a reminder of the file names.
It wasn't hard to adjust, and quite quickly the game didn't feel much different from playing a sighted opponent.
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Re: Rules of chess
I was paired in Italy against a German blind player. At one time, Russian books by the likes of Keres were available in German via East Germany, so I had some vague familiarity with the "ZweiSpringerSpeil" and "Schartz steht besser". To minimise the risk of accidents, I scored the game in German algebraic and took care to check that the sighted board and the touch board showed the same position. The one problem was that I couldn't remember the German for "castles". I was able to play a line where White castled first. I should have remembered it, it's used as part of a magazine title "Rochade".Tristan Clayton wrote: My German is ropey to say the least, my chess-German non-existent. But we were given a crib sheet to help us with our Springers, Königs, Läufers and the like, plus a reminder of the file names.
It wasn't hard to adjust, and quite quickly the game didn't feel much different from playing a sighted opponent.
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Re: Rules of chess
That reminds me - I asked before my game how to announce castling, as it wasn't on the crib sheet.
I suppose König Cesar ein or König Gustav ein would have done, but Lange Rochade and Kurze Rochade sounded more appropriate.
I suppose König Cesar ein or König Gustav ein would have done, but Lange Rochade and Kurze Rochade sounded more appropriate.
Follow me on Twitter @BackRankTristan for a patzer's-eye view of the amateur chess world: 140-character book reviews, ill-informed opinion, cartoon updates from the Back Rank, and other assorted chess rubbish.
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Re: Rules of chess
I read about another sort of unsighted chess :: long ago in Central Asia two sighted men riding horses side by side playing chess by calling moves to each other without using physical board or pieces.