Rudolf Charousek

Rudolf Charousek, 1890s

Rudolf Charousek (Hungarian: Charousek Rezső; September 19, 1873 in Prague April 18, 1900 in Budapest) was a Hungarian chess player.[1] A brilliant player, he had a short career, dying at the age of 26 from tuberculosis. Reuben Fine described him as the John Keats of chess.

Rudolf Charousek was born in Prague on September 19, 1873. His father Karel Charousek and his mother Maria, born as Uher, were also Czech by birth. His father worked as a telegraph operator in Debrecen. Two days after Rudolf's birth Maria took her baby to her parents in the German estate Lomecek near Kutna-Hora, where her father was a forester. When the father joined his family again the child was baptised in the nearest catholic church in Trebonin. On the birth certificate the name Rudolf was written in honor of the father's elder brother, but with a wrong birthplaceKlein-Lometz. The Hungarian form of his prename is Rezso. Charousek learned how to play chess around age 14, receiving a chess set as a Hanukkah gift. Charousek's first chess teacher and partner was Dezso Pap. He soon became one of the strongest players in Miskolc. Charousek was so poor that he could not afford a copy of Bilguer's voluminous collection of openings, so he copied it by hand in the public library. After high school, he studied law at the Academy of Laws in Kassa and was the strongest chess player in that city.

In 1893 he went to Budapest and played chess at the Budapest Chess Club for the first time. Right from the start, Charousek defeated many of the strongest players at the club. He drew his first match with Géza Maróczy, then defeated Hungary's strongest player, Gyula Makovetz.

In July and August 1896, in the surroundings of a Bavarian exposition, a grand chess tournament was planned in Nuremberg, the hometown of Dr. Siegbert Tarrasch. All the strongest players in the world were invited, but Charousek was not invited by the organizers, despite the pleading of Maróczy. However, when the Englishman Henry Edward Bird could not participate, Charousek was officially invited to play in the tournament.

He finished 12th out of 19 players at Nuremberg 1896, ahead of Marco, Albin and Winawer, and defeating Janowski, Blackburne and, in the final round, the tournament winner, world champion Emanuel Lasker. In the same year he was equal second at Budapest with Mikhail Chigorin. He won at Berlin 1897 ahead of 19 masters (winning all 9 games in the last 9 rounds) and the following year he was second at Köln, ahead of Steinitz, Schlechter and other 12 masters.

Because of his nervous temper, it was difficult for Charousek to weather the psychological strain of match play. He was defeated in 1896 at Budapest by Maróczy and Chigorin.

He was one of a few players who had a plus record against Emanuel Lasker, having defeated the world champion at Nuremberg 1896. Lasker was so impressed that he is reported to have said "I shall have to play a championship match with this man some day". His game against Lasker is reproduced below:

King's Gambit 1.e4 e5 2.f4 exf4 3.Bc4 d5 4.Bxd5 Qh4+ 5.Kf1 g5 6.Nf3 Qh5 7.h4 Bg7 8.Nc3 c6 9.Bc4 Bg4 10.d4 Nd7 11.Kf2 Bxf3 12.gxf3 O-O-O 13.hxg5 Qxg5 14.Ne2 Qe7 15.c3 Ne5 16.Qa4 Nxc4 17.Qxc4 Nf6 18.Bxf4 Nd7 19.Qa4 a6 20.Qa5 Nf8 21.Ng3 Ne6 22.Nf5 Qf8 23.Bg3 Rd7 24.Nxg7 Qxg7 25.Qe5 Qxe5 26.Bxe5 f6 27.Bxf6 Rf8 28.Rh6 Nf4 29.Ke3 Ng2+ 30.Kd2 Rdf7 31.e5 Nf4 32.Rah1 Rg8 33.c4 Ne6 34.Ke3 Nf8 35.d5 Rd7 36.e6 1-0    See the game online
Charousek - Wollner
abcdefgh
8
a8 black rook
f8 black king
a7 black pawn
b7 black pawn
c7 black pawn
d7 black bishop
f7 white pawn
g7 black pawn
c6 black knight
d6 black pawn
h6 black pawn
c5 black bishop
c4 white bishop
f4 white bishop
g4 black knight
h4 black queen
c3 white knight
a2 white pawn
b2 white pawn
e2 white queen
g2 white pawn
h2 white pawn
e1 white rook
f1 white rook
h1 white king
8
77
66
55
44
33
22
11
abcdefgh
Position after 16. ...Nc6

Another of Charousek's games, which Grandmaster Andrew Soltis described as "one of the prettiest ever", was the basis for the story Last Round by Kester Svendsen,[2] which Soltis called "perhaps the finest chess short story".[3] Here is the game with punctuation marks by Soltis:

Charousek—Wollner, Kaschau 1893

Danish Gambit 1.e4 e5 2.d4 exd4 3.c3 dxc3 4.Bc4 Nf6 5.Nf3 Bc5 6.Nxc3 d6 7.O-O O-O 8.Ng5 h6 9.Nxf7! Rxf7 10.e5 Ng4!? 11.e6 Qh4! 12.exf7+ Kf8 13.Bf4 Nxf2 14.Qe2 Ng4+ 15.Kh1 Bd7 16.Rae1 Nc6    (see diagram at left) 17.Qe8+!! Rxe8 18.fxe8(Q)+ Bxe8 19.Bxd6 mate.

See the game online.

A variation of the Queen's Gambit Declined is named after him.[4]

Notes

  1. Fred Skolnik; Michael Berenbaum (2007). Encyclopaedia Judaica: Blu-Cof. Granite Hill Publishers. p. 580. ISBN 978-0-02-865932-9.
  2. Last Round by Kester Svendsen
  3. Andrew Soltis, "From Russia with Love", Chess Life, October 1993, p. 16.
  4. http://www.365chess.com/eco/D31_Queen%27s_Gambit_Declined_Charousek_%28Petrosian%29_variation
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