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  2. Modern Chess Openings - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Modern_Chess_Openings

    Modern Chess Openings (usually called MCO) is a reference book on chess openings, first published in 1911 by the British players Richard Clewin Griffith (1872–1955) and John Herbert White (1880–1920). The fifteenth edition was published in 2008. Harry Golombek called it "the first scientific study of the openings in the twentieth century". [1]

  3. Chess opening - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chess_opening

    The most important scheme of classifying chess openings for serious players is by ECO code, a series of 500 opening codes assigned by the Encyclopaedia of Chess Openings. Although these codes are invaluable for the serious study of the chess opening, they are not very practical for a broad survey of the chess opening as the codes obscure common ...

  4. Chess opening book - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chess_opening_book

    Manuals giving general opening advice and guidance - Possibly the most famous example of this type of manual (in English) is Reuben Fine's The Ideas Behind the Chess Openings. This type of book does not analyze any opening system to much depth, but teaches the ideas that will help its reader understand opening play.

  5. Chess theory - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chess_theory

    These include both comprehensive openings encyclopedias such as the Encyclopedia of Chess Openings and Modern Chess Openings; general treatises on how to play the opening such as Mastering the Chess Openings (in four volumes), by International Master John L. Watson; [58] and myriad books on specific openings, such as Understanding the Grünfeld ...

  6. Dunst Opening - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunst_Opening

    The Dunst Opening is a chess opening in which White opens with the move: . 1. Nc3. This fairly uncommon opening may have more names than any other: it is also called the Heinrichsen Opening, Baltic Opening, Van Geet Opening, Sleipnir Opening, Kotrč's Opening, Meštrović Opening, Romanian Opening, Queen's Knight Attack, Queen's Knight Opening, Millard's Opening, Knight on the Left, and (in ...

  7. Saragossa Opening - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Saragossa_Opening

    This opening became popular in the Saragossa chess club (Zaragoza, Spain) in 1919. The next year club member José Juncosa analyzed the opening in Revista del Club Argentino . [ 1 ] In 1922 a theme tournament requiring the players to open with 1.c3 was arranged in Mannheim with three participants, Siegbert Tarrasch , Paul Leonhardt and Jacques ...

  8. List of chess openings - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_chess_openings

    The openings were published in five volumes of ECO, with volumes labeled "A" through "E". This article uses algebraic notation to describe chess moves. This list is incomplete ; you can help by adding missing items .

  9. English Opening - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/English_Opening

    The English Opening is a chess opening that begins with the move: 1. c4. A flank opening, it is the fourth most popular [1] [2] and, according to various databases, one of the four most successful of White's twenty possible first moves. [1] [3] White begins the fight for the centre by staking a claim to the d5-square from the wing, in ...