Chen De

Chen De
Chen De
Full name Chen De
Country  China
Born November 26, 1949 (1949-11-26) (age 61)
China
Title FIDE Master (FM)
FIDE rating 2361
Peak rating 2259 (July 2000)

Chen De (Chinese: 陈德; born 26 November 1949[1]) is a Chinese FIDE master chess player.

Chen De plays for Guangdong chess club in the China Chess League (CCL).[2]

Contents

National championships

In 1974 and 1977, he won the Chinese Chess Championship.

National team

He was a member of the Chinese national chess team. He competed at the Chess Olympiad in 1978, the first time China competed. This was his only appearance at this prestigious event and he played 9 games in total scoring 1 wins, 3 draws and 5 losses.[3]

Chang had also competed for the national team at the Men's Asian Team Chess Championship - the most prestigious team chess tournament in Asia three times in 1977-1981. He played 17 games in all scoring 12 wins, 3 draws and 2 losses.[4]

International arbiter

In July 2004, he qualified for the title of International Arbiter.[5]

See also

References

  1. ^ 中国国际象棋运动员等级分数据库
  2. ^ http://ccl.sports.cn
  3. ^ Chen De OlimpBase - Chess Olympiad
  4. ^ Chen De OlimpBase - Men's Asian Team Chess Championship
  5. ^ [1]

External links

Preceded by
Zhang Donglu (1966)
Men's Chinese Chess Champion
1974
Succeeded by
Qi Jingxuan
Preceded by
Qi Jingxuan
Men's Chinese Chess Champion
1977
Succeeded by
Qi Jingxuan

Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.

Игры ⚽ Поможем сделать НИР

Look at other dictionaries:

  • chen — chen·chu; chen·e·vix·ite; chen·fish; chen·gal; gel·sen·kir·chen; hu·chen; ku·chen; leb·ku·chen; li·chen·i·fi·ca·tion; li·chen·i·fied; li·chen·in; li·chen·ism; li·chen·ist; li·chen·oid; li·chen·o·log·ic; li·chen·ol·o·gist; li·chen·ol·o·gy;… …   English syllables

  • Chen Ru — (陳儒) (d. 885) was a warlord late in the Chinese dynasty Tang Dynasty, who ruled Jingnan Circuit (荊南, headquartered in modern Jingzhou, Hubei) from 882 to 885, most of that time as its military governor (Jiedushi). He was eventually imprisoned by… …   Wikipedia

  • CHEN YI — [TCH’EN YI] (1901 1972) Après des études classiques, Chen Yi, fils de magistrat né à Lezhi (Sichuan), est attiré par des idées progressistes diffusées par les étudiants revenus de l’étranger (en particulier l’anarchisant Li Shizeng) et apprend le …   Encyclopédie Universelle

  • Chen Lu — Nation China Volksrepublik  China …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • Chen — is a Chinese surname and a Hebrew word ( חֵן ) meaning loveliness , or grace , which is also a common given name and surname. See Chen (surname). Chen can also refer to: Chen Dynasty, dynasty in Chinese history Chen (state) during the Zhou… …   Wikipedia

  • Chen — Chen, eine Endsylbe, vermittelst welcher aus Hauptwörtern verkleinernde Wörter gebildet werden. Zuweilen kann diese Sylbe dem Hauptworte ohne alle Veränderung angehänget werden, wie in Becherchen, Bretchen, Beetchen, Beinchen, Bettchen,… …   Grammatisch-kritisches Wörterbuch der Hochdeutschen Mundart

  • Chen — steht für: Chen (Familienname), ein chinesischer Familienname Chen (Vorname), ein chinesischer Vorname Chen Notation Chen Stil, ein Stil des Taijiquan Chen Dynastie (557–589) zur Zeit der Nord und Süd Dynastien Chen (Staat), ein Staat zur Zeit… …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • Chen Yu — may refer to: Chen Yu (Qin Dynasty), Chinese general in Qin Dynasty Chen Yu of Dai, king of Dai of the Eighteen Kingdoms Chen Yu (badminton) (born 1980), Chinese badminton player Chen Yu (information scientist) (born 1944), Chinese information… …   Wikipedia

  • Chen Qi — (chinesisch 陳 玘 / 陈 玘 Chén Qǐ; * 15. April 1984 in Nantong) ist ein chinesischer Tischtennisspieler. Er gewann drei Weltmeistertitel sowie Gold im Doppel bei den Olympischen Somme …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • Chen Li — (chinesisch 陈莉, * 3. August 1985) ist eine chinesische Badmintonspielerin. Karriere Chen Li gewann bei der Badminton Asienmeisterschaft 2006 Bronze im Dameneinzel. Bei den Denmark Open 2004, Singapur Open 2004, China Open 2005 und Singapur… …   Deutsch Wikipedia

Share the article and excerpts

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