Mannheim 1914 chess tournament

The 19th DSB Congress (19. Kongreß des Deutschen Schachbundes), comprising several tournaments, began on 20 July 1914 in Mannheim. Germany declared war on Russia (on August 1) and on France (August 3), Britain joining in the next day. The congress was stopped on 1 August 1914.

The tournament took place in the "Ballhaus", a building situated in the Mannheim Palace garden area.

The following participants played in the Masters tournament (Meisterturnier):

Alexander Alekhine was leading the Meisterturnier, with nine wins, one draw and one loss, when World War I broke out. German organizers of the tournament decided that the players should be "indemnified" according to their score, but not paid the total prize money. Thus Alekhine got 1100 marks, Vidmar 850, Spielmann 600, Breyer, Marshall and Reti 375 each, Janowski 250, Bogoljubov and Tarrasch 180 marks, and all the others 100 marks. Calculated in terms of purchasing power today, the sums would be multiplied ten times in euros. So Alekhine's "consolation prize" was 11,000 Euros.[1]

Meisterturnier

Mannheim 1914, Meisterturnier
123456789012345678Total
1  Alexander Alekhine (Russian Empire) X--1--0111--111½11
2  Milan Vidmar (Austria-Hungary) -X½½½11--½1½-111--
3  Rudolf Spielmann (Austria-Hungary) -½X-1½0-1½1½1---118
4  Gyula Breyer (Austria-Hungary) 0½-X-½½01---1½1-117
5  Frank Marshall (United States) -½0-X11½½-1½1---½½7
6  Richard Réti (Austria-Hungary) -0½½0X½--1111½-1--7
7  Dawid Janowski (France) 101½0½X1--01--½-1-
8  Efim Bogoljubov (Russian Empire) 0--1½-0X½0---11½01
9  Siegbert Tarrasch (German Empire) 0-00½--½X10--111½-
10  Oldřich Duras (Austria-Hungary) 0½½--0-10X100---115
11  Walter John (German Empire) -00-001-10X11--1-05
12  Savielly Tartakower (Austria-Hungary) -½½-½00--10X½0-½-1
13  Hans Fahrni (Switzerland) 0-0000---10½X11½--4
14  Ehrhardt Post (German Empire) 00-½-½-00--10X0-114
15  Carl Carls (German Empire) 00-0--½00---01X½½1
16  Paul Krüger (German Empire) ½0---0-½0-0½½-½X½½
17  Alexander Flamberg (Russian Empire) 0-00½-01½0---0½½X-3
18  Jacques Mieses (German Empire) 0-00½--0-010-00½-X2

Hauptturnier A

The following participants played in the Main tournament (Hauptturnier A):

Mannheim 1914, Hauptturnier A
12345678901234567Total
1  B. Hallegua (Ottoman Empire) X-01-½11½1½-1-1-½8
2  Ilya Rabinovich (Russian Empire) -X10½---111101-1-
3  Oscar Tenner (German Empire) 10X-0110----111½1
4  Carl Ahues (German Empire) 01-X½01½---1-½-11
5  Lajos Asztalos (Austria-Hungary) -½1½X-½-1½½½-0-1-6
6  Fedor Bogatyrchuk (Russian Empire) ½-01-X-½010-1-1-½
7  Sigmund Herland (Romania) 0-00½-X--½½11-11-
8  Willem Schelfhout (Netherlands) 0-1½-½-X-0½01-11-
9  B. Studt (German Empire) ½0--01--X-110-101
10  Alexey Selezniev (Russian Empire) 00--½0½1-X-½-½½11
11  Karel Opočenský (Austria-Hungary) ½0--½1½½0-X-01½-½5
12  Boris Maljutin (Russian Empire) -0-0½-010½-X-1-1½
13  Wilhelm Hilse (German Empire) 010--0001-1-X½0-½4
14  Walter Henneberger (Switzerland) -00½1----½00½X10-
15  Wilhelm Schönmann (German Empire) 0-0--0000½½-10X-13
16  Hans Duhm (Switzerland) -0½00-0010-0-1-X-
17  Gunnar Gundersen (Australia) ½-00-½--00½½½-0-X

This table does not add up. The row of Richard Réti (Austria-Hungary)contains 11 games as expected. However the column is missing a game.

Hauptturnier B

The Hauptturnier B started with five preliminary groups of 10 players each. The two winner groups comprised 9 players each and completed their nine rounds respectively.

The first winner group was won by Julius Brach (Brno, Moravia), 6 (out of 8) points, ahead of Peter Yurdansky and Peter Romanovsky (both from Russia) and František Schubert (Mlada Boleslav, Bohemia), 5 points each. The following players were G.J. van Gelder (4½) (Netherlands), and C. Thönes (3½) (Germany), Salomon Szapiro (Lodz, Poland), H. Thelen (3 each) and P. Müller (1) (both from Germany).

The second winner group was won by Nikoly Rudnev (Kharkov, Ukraine), 7 (out of 8) points, followed by Józef Dominik (Cracow, Poland, 6), Max Lange (Berlin, Germany), 5) − not related to Max Lange −, Asch (4½) (Austria), M. Gargulak (Husovice near Brno, Moravia), and Heinrich Wagner (both 4), A.N. Hallgarten (3), K. Pahl (2) (all from Germany), and Anton Olson (½) (Sweden).

# A winner group Points # B winner group Points
1  Julius Brach (Austria-Hungary) 6 1  Nikolay Rudnev (Russian Empire) 7
2-4  Peter Romanovsky (Russian Empire) 5 2  Józef Dominik (Austria-Hungary) 6
2-4  František Schubert (Austria-Hungary) 5 3  Max Lange (II) (German Empire) 5
2-4  Peter Yurdansky (Russian Empire) 5 4  Asch (Austria-Hungary)
5  G.J. van Gelder (Netherlands) 5-6  Metoděj Gargulák (Austria-Hungary) 4
6  C. Thönes (German Empire) 5-6  Heinrich Wagner (German Empire) 4
7-8  Salomon Schapiro (Russian Empire) 3 7  Albert Hallgarten (German Empire) 3
7-8  H. Thelen (German Empire) 3 8  Kurt Pahl (German Empire) 2
9  P. Müller (German Empire) 1 9  Anton Olson (Sweden) ½

Plans for an International Chess Federation

During the tournament, a group of Russian and German masters, including Peter Petrovich Saburov and World Champion Emanuel Lasker, who did not enter the tournament itself, followed an initiative from the Saint Petersburg 1914 tournament and made concrete plans for an International Chess Federation (see also FIDE).

Outbreak of war and internees

The next DSB congresses, it was decided, were scheduled for Bad Oeynhausen (1916) and Munich (1918). But history took a different turn. The political situation became more and more tense while the tournament went on. Milan Vidmar, in his autobiography Goldene Schachzeiten, gives a fine report about the melancholic mood of the masters participating in the unfinished Mannheim "chess symphony". Soldiers of the German army began to dominate the city panorama. When Germany put first an ultimatum (July 31) and then declared war the following day against Russia, the tournament had to be interrupted.

After the declaration of war, eleven "Russian" players (Alekhine, Bogoljubov, Bogatyrchuk, Flamberg, Koppelman, Maljutin, Rabinovich, Romanovsky, Saburov, Selezniev, Weinstein) were interned in Rastatt, Germany. On September 14, 17, and 29, 1914, four of them (Alekhine, Bogatyrchuk, Saburov, and Koppelman) were freed and allowed to return home via Switzerland.[2] A fifth player, Romanovsky was freed and went back to Petrograd in 1915,[3] and a sixth one, Flamberg was allowed to return to Warsaw in 1916.[4]

Ukrainian master Efim Bogoljubov, stayed in Triberg im Schwarzwald, got married to a local woman and spent the rest of his life in Germany (settled permanently since 1926).

Frenchman Dawid Janowski, born in the Russian Empire, as well as Alekhine, was interned[5] but released to Switzerland after a short internment.[6] Then he moved to the United States.

The American Frank James Marshall, being from a neutral country, was allowed to leave. It took him five days to travel to London, and left almost at once for New York City.[5] In his "My Fifty Years of Chess" Marshall wrote: "I made for the Dutch border and arrived in Amsterdam after many adventures. Usually a seven-hour trip, it took me 39 hours. Somewhere on the border I lost my baggage, containing all my belongings and the presents I received in St. Petersburg and elsewhere...Five years later, much to my astonishment, my trunks arrived in New York, with their contents intact!"

References

  1. "Das unvollendete Turnier: Mannheim 1914".
  2. "Mannheim 1914 The Legend".
  3. Romanov, Isaak Zalmanovich (1984). Petr Romanovsky. Fizkultura i sport. pp. 20 (Russian edition).
  4. "The Internees".
  5. 1 2 "CHESS.". Cheltenham Chronicle. 5 September 1914. Retrieved 21 June 2015 via British Newspaper Archive. (subscription required (help)).
  6. "Unsolved Chess Mysteries".

Literature

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