Contact Form
The Chess Variant Pages Index (Logo graphic)
More Information on this item

advertisement

Rate this page! | Skip to comments

Free Castling Rule

An interesting chess variant is Free Castling Rule.

The Dictionary of Modern Chess indicates that this was played in 17th Century Rome.

Rules

  1. When castling, the King may be placed on any square up to & including the Rook's square and vice versa.
  2. The King & Rook must still end up to the right of the Rook in Kingside castling (and the left of the Rook in Queenside castling).
  3. Check may not be given by castling.

Examples

Here white may castle Queenside and black may castle Kingside.


This is one possible way white and black may castle under these rules.

The most popular Kingside castle in Free Castling involves moving the king to the h-file and the rook to the f-file.


Shown is yet another way white and black may castle.

There are many more possibilities.


Sources

Dictionary of Modern Chess, Byrne J Horton 1959.

Diagrams were made with Chess Captor.


Written by Roger Cooper. HTML conversion by Chuck Moulton.
WWW page created: December 1, 1999.

For author and/or inventor information on this item see: this item's information page.
Created on: January 04, 2001. Last modified on: January 04, 2001.

See Also

There are other pages that are related to this item. See Also.

Comments

This item has comments. View all comments for this item.

Provide feedback on this page!

[info] [edit] [link]


Last modified: Monday, December 22, 2008