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Savielly Tartakower (also
known as
Xavier or
Ksawery Tartakower, less
often Tartacover or Tartakover; 21
February 1887 – 4
February 1956) was a Polish...
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Tartakover or
Tartakower is a gender-neutral
Jewish surname. It is
related to the
surname Tartakovsky, both
meaning "from Tartakov [ru]".
People with the...
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analysis of the
opening in 1903 in a
Russian magazine article.
Savielly Tartakower defeated Richard Réti
using b4 in a
match in 1919 when both were top-level...
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several ways of
dealing with Black's setup: QGD Main Line
Tartakower Variation or
Tartakower–Makogonov–Bondarevsky
System (TMB system): 5...h6 6.Bh4 0-0...
- Lichtenhein–Morphy, New York 1857; Rosenthal–De Vere,
Paris 1867; and
Tartakower–José Raúl Capablanca, New York 1924. The
first known use of the term zwischenzug...
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Aryeh Tartakower (Hebrew: אריה טרטקובר; 1897–1982) was a Polish-born
Israeli political activist,
historian and sociologist. He was the
Director of the...
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Great Britain in two
Olympic Games, now a
Times journalist.
Savielly Tartakower (1887–1956):
Polish and
French chess Grandmaster, the king of
chess journalism...
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knight on c6
after Bb5. The
Fantasy Variation,
formerly known as the
Tartakower or Maróczy Variation, 1.e4 c6 2.d4 d5 3.f3,
somewhat resembles the Blackmar–Diemer...
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Josef Tartakower was an
international table tennis player from Luxembourg. He won a
silver medal at the 1939
World Table Tennis Championships in the men's...
- part of the
smothered mate
pattern known as Philidor's legacy. Réti vs.
Tartakower, 1910 Aron
Nimzowitsch wrote, "Even the
laziest king
flees wildly in the...