- Ludwig Bledow
Dr Ludwig Erdmann Bledow (
July 27 1795 ,Berlin –August 6 1846 ) was a Germanchess master and chess organizer (co-founder of theBerlin Pleiades ).In 1846 he founded the first German chess magazine, "Schachzeitung der Berliner Schachgesellschaft", which would later take the name "Deutsche Schachzeitung ".Influence on the game
Several details of the game's moves and competition rules had not yet been universally agreed in Bledow's time, and some were still being debated in 1851. cite book | title=The Chess Tournament - London 1851 | author= Staunton, H. | publisher=Hardinge Simpole | isbn=1843820897 . Can be viewed online or downloaded at cite web | url=http://books.google.co.uk/books?id=_SUCAAAAYAAJ&pg=PR24&dq=1851+london+tournament+book+staunton&lr=#PPR10,M1 | title=The Chess Tournament ] Bledow, infuenced by
Karl Schorn , argued that a player should be allowed to have multiple queens (as a result ofpawn promotion s), and this was incorporated into the rules. He may also have been the originator of thetouch-move rule .Bledow wrote a letter to
Tassilo von Heydebrand und der Lasa (usually known in in English documents as "von der Lasa" or "Der Lasa") proposing that an international tournament should be organized inTrier ; the letter was printed in the "Deutsche Schachzeitung" in 1848, about 2 years after Bledow's death. Bledow intended that the winner of the proposed tournament should be recognized as the world champion: "Next year we will hopefully see each other in Trier, and until then the winner of the battle in Paris should not be overly proud of his special position, since it is in Trier that the crown will first be awarded." ("battle in Paris" means the 1843 match betweenHoward Staunton andPierre Charles Fournier de Saint-Amant ). cite web | url=http://www.chesscafe.com/text/spinrad06.pdf | title=Early World Rankings | date=2006 | author=Spinrad, J.P. | publisher=chesscafe.com ] News of this may have stimulated Staunton to organize theLondon 1851 chess tournament , which was in fact the world's first international chess tournament.In 1851 the surviving members of the
Berlin Pleiades nominatedAdolf Anderssen to represent Germany at theLondon 1851 chess tournament . As a result of winning the 1851 tournament Anderssen was widely recognised as the world's strongest player. In fact Hugh A. Kennedy, who played in the tournament and helped to organize it, wrote before the event started that the contest was "for the baton of the World's Chess Champion".Playing strength
Assessments of Bledow's playing strength have to rely mainly on the comments of his contemporaries, as Bledow seldom recorded the moves in his games. Various sources, including "Schachzeitung der Berliner Schachgesellschaft" and correspondence by
Tassilo von Heydebrand und der Lasa , indicate that Bledow: cite web | url=http://www.chesscafe.com/text/spinrad11.pdf | author=Spinrad, J.P. | title=Ludwig Erdmann Bledow | publisher=chesscafe.com ]
*in 1838-1839 won a slight majority of his games againstJózsef Szén , who had narrowly beatenLouis-Charles Mahé de La Bourdonnais in a match in 1836.
*won a match againstCarl Jaenisch in 1842.
*won the majority of his games againstHenry Thomas Buckle . It is particularly unfortunate that Buckle also did not record his games, as detailed information would have made it possible to compare Bledow with leading English players such asHoward Staunton . Buckle was considered England's second strongest player after Staunton; in fact some of Staunton's enemies argued that Buckle was the better player.
*in 1845 beatAdolf Anderssen by either 5-0 or 4½-½, depending on which source is used. At this time Anderssen was 27 year old, and perhaps weaker than he was when he won the 1851 and 1862 London International Tournaments.
*defeatedAugustus Mongredien +7 –4 =1, also in 1845. At that time Mongrédien appears to been a stronger player than he was in the late 1850s and 1860s. In 1845, possibly his best year, Mongrédien drew a match withCarl Mayet , and lost to Staunton by –2=3. Later he failed to win a game in matches againstPaul Morphy (1859),Daniel Harrwitz (1860), andWilhelm Steinitz (1863), and finished 11th out of 14 players in the 1862 London International Tournament (he was not invited to play in the 1851 tournament, possibly because he was on the wrong side in a dispute between some of the London clubs).This information is insufficient to justify procaiming Bledow as the strongest player of the mid-1840s, but he would deserve serious consideration as a contender.An 1860 article in the "Atlantic" categorizes Bledow as a "closed" player (like
François-André Danican Philidor , Staunton, Harrwitz, Slous,Bernhard Horwitz and Szén) rather than a "heroic" player (such as Labourdonnais, Morphy, Anderssen,Carl Mayet , Lange, von der Lasa,Serafino Dubois , Saint Amant, Mongredien and several others). Bledow's surviving games support this to some extent - for example he prefers theGiuoco Piano to theKings Gambit , and plays theDutch Defense against 1.d4.Notable games
* [http://www.chessgames.com/perl/chessgame?gid=1336595 Dr. Ludwig Bledow vs Paul Rudolf von Bilguer (1838)]
* [http://www.chessgames.com/perl/chessgame?gid=1266128 Dr. Ludwig Bledow vs Baron Tassilo Heydebrand und der Lasa (1838)]References
External links
*chessgames player|id=79767
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