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  2. Shatranj - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shatranj

    Even today, the word for the bishop piece is alfil in Spanish, alfiere in Italian, fil in Turkish, fīl in Persian and Arabic, and слон ("elephant") in Russian. As chess spread from Iran northward to Russia, and westward into eastern Europe, south to Italy, and finally westward, it mostly retained the original name and look of the piece as ...

  3. Alfil - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alfil

    Antique Indian elephant chess piece representing the king. The pil, alfil, alpil, or elephant is a fairy chess piece that can jump two squares diagonally. It first appeared in shatranj. It is used in many historical and regional chess variants. It was used in standard chess before being replaced by the bishop in the 15th and 16th centuries.

  4. List of fairy chess pieces - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_fairy_chess_pieces

    A fairy chess piece is a game piece that is not in regular chess but appears in an alternate version of chess with different rules. Such an alternate version is known as a chess variant. In addition, fairy chess pieces are used in fairy chess, an area of chess problems involving changes to the rules of chess.

  5. Chess piece - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chess_piece

    The characters implied by pieces' names vary between languages. For example, in many languages, the piece known in English as the "knight" frequently translates as "horse", and the English "bishop" frequently translates as "elephant" in language areas that adapted the modern bishop's movement pattern, but not its new name. [10]

  6. Charlemagne chessmen - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Charlemagne_chessmen

    Queen. The legend regarding the set states that these chessmen were given as a gift to Charlemagne by Caliph Harun al-Rashid, [3] who was an avid chess player. The fact that the set displays elephants instead of bishops and chariots instead of rooks denotes a form of the Perso-Arabic game known as Shatranj, itself coming from the original Indian Chaturanga (which compound word means the 'Four ...

  7. Fairy chess piece - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fairy_chess_piece

    Fragment of a chessboard and chess pieces from 17th-century Russia. This may once have been a "standard" form of chess in a particular area. The earliest known forms of chess date from the 7th century in Persia (chatrang) and India . They had different rules from the modern game.

  8. Russian chess player allegedly tried to poison opponent by ...

    www.aol.com/news/russian-chess-player-allegedly...

    The Russian Chess Federation’s executive director, Alexander Tkachyov, told state news agency Tass on Wednesday that officials were “deeply disappointed” by the incident. “We are waiting ...

  9. List of chess variants - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_chess_variants

    Proteus: A chess variant using dice to represent normal chess pieces, created by Steve Jackson Games. [39] Shako: Played on a 10×10 board. New pieces are the cannon from xiangqi (Chinese chess) and an elephant moving as a fers+alfil of old shatranj (ancestors of queen and bishop), so diagonally one or two squares with jumps allowed. By Jean ...