Wenzhou

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  • Wenzhou

    Ding Liren had little difficulty defeating Boris Gelfand in the 4 game match played in the former's city of birth, Wenzhou. After drawing the first 2 games, Ding Liren won both games 3 and 4 to win the match 3 to 1. The Chess24 citation of Wenzhou as a "chess city" caught my attention.

    https://chess24.com/en/watch/live-to...fand-ding-2015

    This led me to the Wikipedia entry on Wenzhou which is a fascinating read in and of itself. The city is evidently more famous for its mathematicians than its chess players, producing more mathematicians than any other city in the world.

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wenzhou

    I particularly loved this little gem:

    Moreover, when Ye Yonglie asked Su Buqing whether"the commonly-shared Wenzhounese cuisine culture of consuming Large yellow croaker was one of the major reasons of the vast formation of local mathematicians", Su Buqing answered "No, no, no. It's rather because of the fact that the entire area of Wenzhou is too poor to do science, and it only takes the cost of a pencil to do math, therefore, most of the Wenzhounese people just started to do math, and then, generations of local mathematicians just kept coming out of the city."[
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