Chess Rules
Learn the Chess Rules
and Rule the Board!
Lasker's Manual of Chess
2nd World Chess Champion E. Lasker
The Chess game and its rule has a history that at all times has awakened
interest but of which very little is known. We know some fables treating of
the origin of the game, fables that are true to history only in so far as they
lay the place of origin in Asia and the time of origin in a very distant past.
Games similar to Chess have been discovered on Egyptian sculptures. Written
documents, a thousand years old, referring to Chess, have been found. The game
of Chess of those days was not, however, the game that we now know. No doubt,
Chess has undergone many changes and who knows whether Draughts, or, more precisely,
a game related to Draughts, was not a forefather of our Chess.
The European career of Chess began a thousand years ago. At that time it
was an admired favorite in Spain, the game of the noble and the learned. In
feudal castles and at the courts of princes it was cultivated; it was praised
in artistic poems. For centuries it remained the aristocratic, noble, royal
game, accessible only to a refined taste. Later, it penetrated through Italy
and France, and at last it found a home wherever the foot of the white man trod.
Chess, as pointed out, has changed, but in its attire, in its forms only,
by no means in its essence, its idea. That has remained unchanged all through
the many centuries of its life. To discover this idea is therefore not difficult:
at all times Chess has had the will, the intent, the meaning of picturing a
war between two parties: a war of extinction, conducted according to rules,
laws, in a cultured manner, yet without clemency. This becomes evident from
the rules of the game almost at first sight.
Chess Rule -
The Chess Board
Let's start chess rules by looking at the chess board. The most ancient and
most enduring feature of Chess is certainly the board, the table upon which
it is played on the field of the Chess struggle. It consists of 64 parts everyone
a small square, in their totality composing a large square. In eight rows and,
perpendicularly thereto, in eight lines the 64 squares are ordered. Consequently
one can draw a Chessboard by halving the side of a big square three times in
succession.
The technical process of producing a Chessboard is therefore very simple,
and the logical conception, neither is apprehension of the board complicated.
The perception of the 64 squares by the eye is no so easy, but it has been facilitated
by the use of color. The squares are alternately colored black and white, so
that from time immemorial the Chessboard looks as follows:

It is of importance that the student of Chess should know the board very
accurately; he should be able to visualize each square in its individual position
as well as in its relations to its neighboring squares. For this reason the
board has been divided into three regions: the middle and the two wings. The
left wing is composed of the first and second line to the left, the right wing
in the same way by the two extreme lines on the right hand, and the middle is
formed by the four remaining lines, the third, fourth, fifth and sixth. In the
center of this middle, four squares are situated, which form the intersection
of the fourth and fifth line with the fourth and fifth row. These four squares
in the center of the board have, for strategic purposes, the greatest significance.
To describe the events on the Chessboard briefly and exactly, a name has
been given to every one of the 64 squares; in olden times a descriptive name,
in our time, where the science of Nature and of Mathematics has become so prominent,
a mathematical name. This mathematical name reminds us of a system of coordinates
in the manner as introduced by Descartes. Accordingly, the eight lines, running
upwards, are successively designated by the numbers 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8,
and the eight rows running from left to right, are successively designated by
the letters a, b, c, d, e, f, g, h. The "a" line, "b" line, through the "h"
line is therefore a certain line; the first row, second row, through the eighth
row is a certain row. Since each square belongs to one line and to one row only,
its line and row unambiguously designate it. For instance, "b5" is that one
square on the b file that belongs to the fifth row. According to custom the
letter precedes the number: one writes b5, never 5b. Thus this notation has
the advantage of naming each square without ambiguity.
Of the other notation, the descriptive one, which is in use in many countries
and also in the Anglo-Saxon world, we shall speak more fully later on.
In the mathematical notation, the division of the board described above would
read as follows: the left wing "a" and "b" files, the right wing "g" and "h"
files, the middle c, d, e, f line, the center d4, d5, e4, e5. The boundary of
the board is formed by the "a" file, the "h" file, the first rank, the eighth
rank. The corners are a1, a8, h1, and h8.
The student should endeavor to acquire the habit of designating the squares
and of visualizing their position. There are many Chess players who fail merely
from their incapacity to master this geometrical task, not suspecting its value.
Go to Lesson 2: The Chess Piece Rules
Chess Rules
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