Chess Problems of 1001 Years Ago
Contact Form
The Chess Variant Pages Index (Logo graphic)
More Information on this item

Our Featured Variant: Try the Chinese game of Xiangqi, one of the most popular and enduring Chess variants in the world.

advertisement
World's 1st Successful 4 Player Traditional Chess

Rate this page! | Skip to comments

Check!

This problem is typical for many mansubat (shatranj problems): White is almost mated: it is easy to see that if black were to move, he can mate white in one move (here: R h6 - h8). However, it is white's turn to play, and white can continue to give check to black, until he mates black.

White:
King e8; General g3; Rook b2; Knight a8, c4; Elephant c1, f1; Pawns b5, c3, c7, d7, g4, h2. (13 pieces)

Black:
King f3, Rook g7, h6; Knight b7, c5; Elephant d6; Pawns a5, g6. (8 pieces).

White to play and win.

Solution


Written by Hans Bodlaender.
WWW page created: August 13, 1996. Last modified: September 2, 1997.

For author and/or inventor information on this item see: this item's information page.
Created on: August 13, 1996. Last modified on: January 04, 2001.

See Also

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

Comments

There are currently no comments or ratings for this item.

Provide feedback on this page!

[info] [edit] [link]


Last modified: Monday, December 22, 2008