South African Chess Championship

South African Chess Championship

The first South African Chess Championship was organised in 1892 by the Cape Town Chess Club. Nowadays the Championship is organised by Chess South Africa (CHESSA), the governing body of chess in South Africa. The tournament is normally held every two years. It is restricted to chess players resident in South Africa (although exceptions have been made on occasion) and participation is by invitation only.

CHESSA was formed in 1992, after unification talks between various chess bodies that commenced the previous year. The 1995 event, the first organised by CHESSA, included titled players from Angola and Zimbabwe and was run on the Swiss system. Since that date, the tournament has been held on a round-robin basis. The winner of the tournament holds the title of South African Closed Chess Champion until the next tournament is held.

Historically, the tournament was usually held on a round-robin or double round-robin basis. In case of a tie for first place, a playoff match was usually conducted. In the early days, the title holder could also be challenged to a title match, and these matches are tabled below.

Winners of the national championship

:

Winners of the South African Title

* 1912 Bruno Edgar Siegheim (defeated Henk Meihuizen in challenge)
* 1911 Bruno Edgar Siegheim (defeated Harry Duhan in challenge)
* 1910 Max Blieden (defeated Bruno Edgar Siegheim in challenge)
* 1898 Edward Roberts (defeated P.G. Van Breda in challenge)
* 1897 Edward Roberts (defeated Arthur Cameron in challenge)

References

* "A History of Chess in Southern Africa", by Leonard Reitstein (2003), ISBN 978-0620298292. This covers the period from 1892 until 1945.
* "South African Chessplayer", edited by Leonard Reitstein, published from 1953 to 1986.
* "Guinness Chess: The Records", by Ken Whyld (1986), page 114. This list covers the period from 1892 until 1986.
* "Chess In The RSA", edited by Charles van der Westhuizen and others, published from 1987 to 1990.
* "Chess in Southern Africa", edited by Mark Levitt and others, published from 1991 to 1995.
* Reports from "The Week In Chess" (TWIC) by Mark Crowther. Refer to TWIC187 for 1998, TWIC286 for 2000, TWIC451 for 2003, TWIC548 for 2005 and TWIC685 for 2007 Championship.
* On the 1924 championships: [http://mysite.mweb.co.za/residents/keithru/mccord.html]


Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.

Игры ⚽ Поможем написать реферат

Look at other dictionaries:

  • Chess around the world — Chess is played all over the world and is organised in different chess federations. These are organised on a national, supranational and international level. FIDE, the Fédération Internationale des Échecs was established in 1924 and most national …   Wikipedia

  • Index of chess articles — Contents 1 Books 2 General articles 2.1 0–9 2.2 A …   Wikipedia

  • List of South Africa-related topics — The following is a partial list of South Africa related topics. Those interested in the subject can monitor changes to the pages by clicking on Related changes in the sidebar.History*History of South AfricaEvents*Jan van Riebeeck *History of Cape …   Wikipedia

  • List of African-American firsts — see also|List of first African American mayors for most mayor listings African Americans are a demographic minority in the United States. African Americans initial achievements in various fields historically establish a foothold, providing a… …   Wikipedia

  • David Friedgood — (born 11 July 1946, Cape Town) is a South African–British chess master. He won South African Chess Championship in 1967, 1971 and 1973. He shared 7th at Caorle 1972 (zonal).[1] Friedgood represented South Africa in Chess Olympiads at Tel Aviv… …   Wikipedia

  • FIBA World Championship — Sport Basketball Founded 1950 No. of teams 24 Country(ies) FIBA members Continent FIBA (International) Most recent …   Wikipedia

  • FIVB World Championship — Sport Volleyball Founded 1949 Commissioner Wei Jizhong (魏纪中) Inaugural season …   Wikipedia

  • Wolfgang Heidenfeld — (May 29 1911 ndash; August 3 1981) was a chess player.Heidenfeld was born in Berlin. He was forced to move from Germany to South Africa because he was a Jew. There, he won the South African Chess Championship eight times, and he represented South …   Wikipedia

  • Downers Grove South High School — Address 1436 Norfolk St. Downers Grove, Illinois, 60516 United States Coordinates …   Wikipedia

  • Francis Joseph Lee — (January 1857, London – 12 September 1909, London) was an English chess master.He played several matches; lost to Isidor Gunsberg (1 : 4) at Bradford 1888, Joseph Henry Blackburne (5 : 9) at London 1890, Emanuel Lasker (0.5 : 1.5) at London 1891 …   Wikipedia

Share the article and excerpts

Direct link
Do a right-click on the link above
and select “Copy Link”