Muzychuk sisters

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  • Muzychuk sisters

    The Muzychuk sisters have been immortalized by the Post of Ukraine (:

    http://monaco2015.fide.com/en/main-p...zychuk-sisters

    Perhaps a chess philatelist could apprise us with a full list of chess players who have graced their countries stamps.

  • #2
    Re: Muzychuk sisters

    Originally posted by Jack Maguire View Post
    chess players who have graced their countries stamps.
    Lithuanian HGM Vladas Mikenas.


    on a postcard marking his 100th anniversary

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    • #3
      Re: Muzychuk sisters

      Muzychuk Sisters

      Chess on Stamps

      There is an interesting site on philatelic chess:

      http://www.tri.org.au/chess/

      In the Rose Online Catalogue they show stamps with these people on them:

      Alekhine (7), Anderssen (5), Bogoljubow (2), Botvinnik (2), Capablanca (39), Chigorin (1), Euwe (1), Fischer (6), Korchnoi (9), Lasker (12), Morphy (4), Nimzowitsch (1), Petrosian (1), Philidor (6), Smyslov (1), Spassky (7), Steinitz (8) and Tal (1).

      For Fischer, for example, the countries issuing stamps are: Nicaragua, Comores, Korea, Central Africa, Tuvalu and Mongolia.

      Bobby Fischer said this in his Fourth Press Conference on the 21st of September, 1992:

      ‘Paul Morphy was a great chessplayer, a genius. I’m a little embarrassed when I think that I’ve got a [commemorative] stamp and I’m still even alive. As far as I know he hasn’t got a stamp, at least not in America, and I think it is really outrageous that he hasn’t got a stamp. Nonentities have got a stamp.

      A few years ago, I think it was a hundredth anniversary of the birth of Capablanca, the Cuban world chess champion, and the Cubans sent me, I think, 30 stamps that they had published and printed about Capablanca just in one year. They already had stamps in earlier years of Capablanca.

      Morphy, I think everyone agrees, was probably the greatest genius of them all, and he’s never gotten a single stamp. That tells you something about our government.’
      _______

      There are some Capablanca stamps at:

      http://www.chesshistory.com/winter/w...html#6197._Who

      See Chess Notes Nos. 6199 and 6221
      _______
      There are also stamps issued for World Championships and the Olympiads. These are referenced in the Rose online catalogue (above).

      For a comprehensive review see also:

      http://www.chessmaniac.com/chess-stamps/

      _______

      I first became aware of chess on stamps through a magazine called Chess Stamps Informant (began in 1968 by Bob Long of Davenport, Iowa). I subscribed to the magazine that absorbed it, The Chess Arts, but had decided much before that to collect chess books, not chess stamps.

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      • #4
        Re: Muzychuk sisters

        Fwiw, Chess Informant postcards exist, with cartoons, charicatures & names of world class chess players (including long deceased ones).
        Last edited by Kevin Pacey; Thursday, 22nd October, 2015, 02:14 PM. Reason: Spelling
        Anything that can go wrong will go wrong.
        Murphy's law, by Edward A. Murphy Jr., USAF, Aerospace Engineer

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        • #5
          Re: Muzychuk sisters

          I think Paul Keres is commemorated on an Estonian stamp. I know he is on an Estonian banknote. If they haven't yet gotten around to a Keres stamp, next year would be a good one: 2016 will be the centenary of his birth. :)

          How about a Canadian stamp for GM Yanofsky, the first GM developed in the Commonwealth!?

          Comment


          • #6
            Re: Muzychuk sisters

            There is a 1991 Soviet Keres stamp: see Wikipedia.org, article on Paul Keres. :)

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