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A brief history of chess - Alex Gendler

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    The attacking infantry advances steadily,
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    their elephants already having
    broken the defensive line.
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    The king tries to retreat, but enemy
    cavalry flanks him from the rear.
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    Escape is impossible.
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    But this isn’t a real war–
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    nor is it just a game.
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    Over the roughly one-and-a-half millennia
    of its existence,
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    chess has been known as a tool
    of military strategy,
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    a metaphor for human affairs,
    and a benchmark of genius.
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    While our earliest records of chess
    are in the 7th century,
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    legend tells that the game’s origins
    lie a century earlier.
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    Supposedly, when the youngest prince
    of the Gupta Empire was killed in battle,
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    his brother devised a way of representing
    the scene to their grieving mother.
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    Set on the 8x8 ashtapada board used for
    other popular pastimes,
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    a new game emerged with two key features:
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    different rules for moving
    different types of pieces,
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    and a single king piece whose fate
    determined the outcome.
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    The game was originally
    known as chaturanga–
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    a Sanskrit word for ‘four divisions.’
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    But with its spread to Sassanid Persia,
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    it acquired its current name
    and terminology–
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    “chess,” derived from ‘shah,, meaning
    king, and “checkmate” from ‘shah mat,’
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    or “the king is helpless.”
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    After the 7th century Islamic conquest
    of Persia,
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    chess was introduced to the Arab world.
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    Transcending its role as a
    tactical simulation,
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    it eventually became a rich source
    of poetic imagery.
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    Diplomats and courtiers used chess terms
    to describe political power.
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    Ruling caliphs became avid
    players themselves.
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    And historian al-Mas’udi considered the
    game a testament to human free will
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    compared to games of chance.
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    Medieval trade along the Silk Road carried
    the game to East and Southeast Asia,
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    where many local variants developed.
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    In China, chess pieces were placed at
    intersections of board squares
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    rather than inside them, as in the native
    strategy game Go.
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    The reign of Mongol leader Tamerlane saw
    an 11x10 board with safe squares
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    called citadels.
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    And in Japanese shogi, captured pieces
    could be used by the opposing player.
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    But it was in Europe that chess began to
    take on its modern form.
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    By 1000 AD, the game had become part
    of courtly education.
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    Chess was used as an allegory
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    for different social classes performing
    their proper roles,
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    and the pieces were re-interpreted
    in their new context.
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    At the same time, the Church remained
    suspicious of games.
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    Moralists cautioned against devoting
    too much time to them,
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    with chess even being briefly
    banned in France.
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    Yet the game proliferated,
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    and the 15th century saw it cohering into
    the form we know today.
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    The relatively weak piece of advisor was
    recast as the more powerful queen–
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    perhaps inspired by the recent surge
    of strong female leaders.
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    This change accelerated the game’s pace,
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    and as other rules were popularized,
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    treatises analyzing common openings
    and endgames appeared.
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    Chess theory was born.
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    With the Enlightenment era, the game
    moved from royal courts to coffeehouses.
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    Chess was now seen as an expression
    of creativity,
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    encouraging bold moves and dramatic plays.
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    This ‘Romantic’ style reached its peak
    in the Immortal Game of 1851,
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    where Adolf Anderssen managed a checkmate
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    after sacrificing his queen
    and both rooks.
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    But the emergence of formal competitive
    play in the late 19th century
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    meant that strategic calculation would
    eventually trump dramatic flair.
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    And with the rise of international
    competition,
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    chess took on a new
    geopolitical importance.
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    During the Cold War,
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    the Soviet Union devoted great resources
    to cultivating chess talent,
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    dominating the championships for the rest
    of the century.
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    But the player who would truly upset
    Russian dominance
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    was not a citizen of another country
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    but an IBM computer called Deep Blue.
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    Chess-playing computers had been
    developed for decades,
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    but Deep Blue’s triumph
    over Garry Kasparov in 1997
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    was the first time a machine
    had defeated a sitting champion.
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    Today, chess software is capable of
    consistently defeating
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    the best human players.
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    But just like the game they’ve mastered,
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    these machines are products
    of human ingenuity.
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    And perhaps that same ingenuity will guide
    us out of this apparent checkmate.
Title:
A brief history of chess - Alex Gendler
Speaker:
Alex Gendler
Description:

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Video Language:
English
Team:
closed TED
Project:
TED-Ed
Duration:
05:20
lauren mcalpine approved English subtitles for A brief history of chess
lauren mcalpine accepted English subtitles for A brief history of chess
lauren mcalpine edited English subtitles for A brief history of chess
Tara Ahmadinejad edited English subtitles for A brief history of chess
Tara Ahmadinejad edited English subtitles for A brief history of chess

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