Petrosian Memorial Supertournament
Moscow, 25 Sept, by Sergey Smyshlyaev.
The traditional major tournament, annually held in Moscow and dedicated to great Soviet players this year will be the Tigran Petrosian Memorial and will open on November 3, said the President of the Russian chess Federation (RCF) Andrei Filatov.
For many years before it was the Mikhail Tal Memorial, in Moscow bringing together the leading chess players in the world.
"We plan to hold tournaments memory of our great champions. We have earlier been the Tal Memorial, then it was Alekhine-Memorial at the Louvre and in the Russian Museum. This year it is the Petrosian Memorial, because he is a great champion, and this year marks his 85th birthday.
The tournament starts on November 3. And we plan to continue to remember all of our Champions and regularly conduct large chess competitions, dedicated to their memory-one tournament a year, "said Filatov, the Agency" r-sport ".
http://rsport.ru/chess/20140925/775430883.html
________
The first Russian Museum of Chess opened today in the Central House of Chess on Gogolevsky Boulevard.
There are photos at
http://www.chess-news.ru/node/16757
The bases of the collection of the Museum are valuable and rare exhibits, purchased from the Leningrad collector Vyacheslav Dombrovsky, who began collecting them over a hundred years ago. The Museum funds expanded through gifts of chess and distinguished guests, Soviet and Russian championship trophies.
Presents to the museum were made of rare chess sets, posters, cups and awards won by the Soviet and Russian chess players and pictures on the chess theme. On the pictures you can see the table, figures, watches, stationery, banners-all with the legendary match, Karpov-Kasparov 1984-85.
The Museum became the successor of the chess museum rooms, working with CDŠ in the eighties. It will be open to visitors on weekdays in tours by appointment.
In the world of chess museums can be counted on the fingers of one hand: in addition to Moscow, other known institutions are in Amsterdam and Luzern.
Moscow, 25 Sept, by Sergey Smyshlyaev.
The traditional major tournament, annually held in Moscow and dedicated to great Soviet players this year will be the Tigran Petrosian Memorial and will open on November 3, said the President of the Russian chess Federation (RCF) Andrei Filatov.
For many years before it was the Mikhail Tal Memorial, in Moscow bringing together the leading chess players in the world.
"We plan to hold tournaments memory of our great champions. We have earlier been the Tal Memorial, then it was Alekhine-Memorial at the Louvre and in the Russian Museum. This year it is the Petrosian Memorial, because he is a great champion, and this year marks his 85th birthday.
The tournament starts on November 3. And we plan to continue to remember all of our Champions and regularly conduct large chess competitions, dedicated to their memory-one tournament a year, "said Filatov, the Agency" r-sport ".
http://rsport.ru/chess/20140925/775430883.html
________
The first Russian Museum of Chess opened today in the Central House of Chess on Gogolevsky Boulevard.
There are photos at
http://www.chess-news.ru/node/16757
The bases of the collection of the Museum are valuable and rare exhibits, purchased from the Leningrad collector Vyacheslav Dombrovsky, who began collecting them over a hundred years ago. The Museum funds expanded through gifts of chess and distinguished guests, Soviet and Russian championship trophies.
Presents to the museum were made of rare chess sets, posters, cups and awards won by the Soviet and Russian chess players and pictures on the chess theme. On the pictures you can see the table, figures, watches, stationery, banners-all with the legendary match, Karpov-Kasparov 1984-85.
The Museum became the successor of the chess museum rooms, working with CDŠ in the eighties. It will be open to visitors on weekdays in tours by appointment.
In the world of chess museums can be counted on the fingers of one hand: in addition to Moscow, other known institutions are in Amsterdam and Luzern.
Comment