The Extraordinary Origins of Chess: Irving Finkel & Sushma Jansari, The Portico Library, 2021

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  • čas přidán 22. 08. 2024

Komentáře • 170

  • @RascalKyng
    @RascalKyng Před 3 lety +148

    I am surprised Finkel does not have 5x the amount of shared content online. The world needs way more Finkel.

  • @blogbalkanstories4805
    @blogbalkanstories4805 Před 3 lety +130

    Irving Finkel never ceases to amaze, fascinate, educate and entertain me. What a scholar. It is very unusual to have someone who is so well read in so many different fields - and so passionate about all of them. He should really have a regular show, kind of as the (ancient) history teacher of the world.

    • @bloodisfrightening1203
      @bloodisfrightening1203 Před 3 lety +5

      Undoubtedly. I wish I could have gone to that museum and have a chat with him.

    • @orchunter8388
      @orchunter8388 Před rokem +2

      But not on history channel. For obvious reasons.

  • @beeheart6529
    @beeheart6529 Před rokem +7

    I hope someone is filming Dr Finkel every day. What a treasure he is to the human race!

  • @WandaDeeBackroads
    @WandaDeeBackroads Před 2 lety +38

    I lived in Korea back in the 1970s where I learned to play janggi, the Korean descendent of Chaturanga, the Indian ancestor of chess. I liked the way guys would play it in the street, squatting down with the game between them, the board made from any old piece of plywood with lines drawn on it and the playing pieces were made from disks cut out of an old broom handle. And they never played it slowly, contemplating every move. They played like maniacs

  • @TomPlantagenet
    @TomPlantagenet Před rokem +5

    “When the game is over, the king and the pawn go back into the same box.”-Cortana

  • @cinbellextratempus8153
    @cinbellextratempus8153 Před 3 lety +49

    He's a gem he really is

  • @amanitamuscaria7500
    @amanitamuscaria7500 Před 2 lety +12

    We always learn loads when Irving gives a talk. He's an absolute goldmine.

    • @theporticolibrary1295
      @theporticolibrary1295  Před 2 lety +4

      Thanks for watching Amanita. We're glad that you enjoyed Irving and Sushma's event. Please tell your friends, and donate if you can at www.theportico.org.uk/donate.

  • @aaronwalderslade
    @aaronwalderslade Před 3 lety +24

    Elephants, chariots, horses, you say. I played chess against an Indian opponent a couple of summers ago on a giant chess set, and he called the rooks cannons, which I thought was fantastic, because they do fire in a straight line until they hit something. I think he did call the Knights elephants, and I don't remember what he called the bishops.

    • @imokin86
      @imokin86 Před 3 lety +15

      That's fascinating. In Russian, bishops are called elephants, and rooks are longships.

  • @MrBenjaminsavage
    @MrBenjaminsavage Před 3 lety +20

    YAY! Irving Finkel! Never can get enough of him.

  • @Dbean48
    @Dbean48 Před 2 lety +8

    Do enjoy your talks Irving, you sure squired a massive amount of information, love the story telling not many people have gift to make things enjoyable at the same time learning..

  • @manfredpseudowengorz
    @manfredpseudowengorz Před 2 lety +6

    9:25
    couldn't resist, and calculated a rough estimation on that:
    rice grain: ~ 2mm x 5 mm.
    British Islands: ~ 250k km sq
    foot = 0.3048 m
    br. islands area * 7 feet / rice grain vol. : ~ 27 * 10^9 grains of rice
    the number of rice grains mentioned is (2^65) - 1
    ~ 3.7 * 10 ^ 19
    which is over a billion times more...
    You welcome.

    • @sharonjuniorchess
      @sharonjuniorchess Před 2 lety +2

      There is only 1 grain in the first square so the 64th square will have 2^63 = 9,223,372,036,854,775,808 or 9.2 x 10^18. As we are doubling up on each square the entire board would require (2^64) − 1 = 18,446,744,073,709,551,615 or 18.4 x 10^18 so still well over 7 ft as you suggest..

  • @obsidianrazor
    @obsidianrazor Před 3 lety +9

    Fun fact, in spanish the elephant is still called the "Alfil" :D

    • @RealVik123
      @RealVik123 Před rokem +3

      True. It has a bishop shape,but the name in spanish its alfil, and not obispo(bishop). Curious

  • @sandfly60
    @sandfly60 Před rokem +3

    How wonderful. Finally someone talks about the history of chess and it’s many permutations. And that someone is Dr Finkel. Thank you so much.

  • @Hinzmana
    @Hinzmana Před 3 lety +10

    This was a delight. Thank you.

    • @theporticolibrary1295
      @theporticolibrary1295  Před 2 lety

      You're welcome Hinzmana. Great to hear that you enjoyed the event. You can support our non-profit talks and activities at www.theportico.org.uk/donate and see the Fun & Games exhibition online at www.theportico.org.uk/fun-and-games

  • @theonlygoodlookinghabsburg2081

    Irving Finkel

  • @uncleelias
    @uncleelias Před 2 lety +7

    I wonder if queens were given such movement because women traveled from one kingdom to another in order to become queen. She brought new alliances and culture to the court while having influence. Kings were limited in scope to their own realm. Of course, Finkel's explanation of the moves being simply game related is most likely the reason.

    • @SunburntHands
      @SunburntHands Před rokem +1

      The variant where the Queen moves as far as she likes in any direction (which has since become key to the modern game) was often called 'the Mad Queen', which is a less kind interpretation.

  • @anuradha7437
    @anuradha7437 Před 3 lety +9

    When Anand was champion, there was a huge upswing in people stopping to play cricket and play chess for five minutes instead.
    Very accurate indeed

  • @nickrowley5579
    @nickrowley5579 Před 2 lety +4

    The ebony and ivory material change causing sets to become black and white makes sense. Possibly because those were also the materials used for pianos and so maybe were available for carving.

    • @allangibson8494
      @allangibson8494 Před 7 měsíci

      Stone chess pieces were more common in early European history…

  • @johnhrichak3451
    @johnhrichak3451 Před 2 lety +2

    The visage of Irving Finkle revs up my desire to learn yet humbles my present knowledge of whatever subject he speaks. Listen and learn. And laugh!

  • @Erkynar
    @Erkynar Před 3 lety +9

    This is a treat! Thank you. And also, extremely fun to hear a shout-out for Agadmator. For anyone interested in chess (presumably anyone watching this already knows this, but still), he's a great source of fun analysis of historical and modern games.

    • @DS-zq4ik
      @DS-zq4ik Před 3 lety +3

      This is true. Agadmator is an excellent source. Of course, there are also things called books, several of them, I have heard, are quite good. Although I have never read one myself. It is interesting that scholarship on chess has not gone much beyond Murray (1913), even today.

    • @theporticolibrary1295
      @theporticolibrary1295  Před 2 lety +2

      Great to hear that you enjoyed our talk Johan. Thanks for watching. Please spread the word, and you can donate something at www.theportico.org.uk/donate if you'd like to help us produce more events and activities.

  • @Katey2012able
    @Katey2012able Před 3 lety +7

    There is a wonderful collection of chess pieces at Maryhill Museum of Art in the Columbia Gorge, Washington State, USA

    • @pandoorloki1232
      @pandoorloki1232 Před 2 lety

      Sam Hill had a bastard son named Sam Hill who had a son named Sam Hill who is a good friend of mine. I've been to Maryhill and saw a photo on the wall of my friend's father (the bastard son). I also went on a Black Sea cruise with my friend Sam and his mother; we visited an arboretum that used to be a palace of the Queen of Romania, who was close to the elder Sam Hill and had urged him to turn Maryhill into a museum.

  • @alanjameson8664
    @alanjameson8664 Před 11 měsíci +1

    When I was a boy (I am a few years older than Dr. Finkel) I could never win, or even compete with, my elder brother at chess--so I gave it up as a lost cause. There was a time when I had someone with whom to play Go--the East Asian board game--and that was very interesting, but after several years we went our different ways.

  • @imokin86
    @imokin86 Před 3 lety +13

    The tale of innumerable grains on a chess board is familiar to virtually everyone in Russia. Chess used to be big here, and our math teachers and pop-science writers used this story to illustrate very large numbers. (by the way, chess are called shahmaty in Russian, from the Persian "Shah Mat", the King's dead, as mentioned here.)

    • @manchagojohnsonmanchago6367
      @manchagojohnsonmanchago6367 Před rokem +1

      Was still huge when i was in russia 18 years ago.. Backgammon too. Cards as well.. Id say at leats then russians were the worlds biggest cards and chess players

  • @TTM9691
    @TTM9691 Před rokem +1

    This is fantastic, I've been looking for a video just like this for months. THANK YOU. Excellent interview, excellent questions, excellent answers, excellent illustrations. Many thanks.

  • @christopherhume1631
    @christopherhume1631 Před 3 lety +4

    This was fun. Thanks for all of the history, insights and good humour.

    • @theporticolibrary1295
      @theporticolibrary1295  Před 2 lety +1

      Thanks Christopher. We're glad that you liked the talk. Please spread the word and check out our other activities, exhibitions, and events at www.theportico.org.uk

  • @timetraveller6643
    @timetraveller6643 Před 2 lety +8

    I wonder if the black/white pieces became popular because of a manufacturing factor. Did piano manufacturing companies start a sideline turning ebony and ivory?

  • @paolabolognese3530
    @paolabolognese3530 Před 9 dny

    How amazing video! Thank you so so much from the 13th of August 2024 !!! 😊❤

  • @sam21462
    @sam21462 Před 2 lety +5

    I have been married to a wonderful lady for 36 years now. It very nearly never happened because we once, foolishly, played a game of Monopoly.

  • @judithdeverteuil9726
    @judithdeverteuil9726 Před 2 lety +1

    Good evening. Last question... "What would I like to change?"
    I would like when the pawn reaches the opponents side that your opponent promotes you. Scripture says let others promote you in the gate.... let others speak of you not you yourself.
    Well done 👏

  • @dsdm2364
    @dsdm2364 Před 3 lety +3

    the fact that irving has watched agadmator blows my socks off

    • @marthadunkley6758
      @marthadunkley6758 Před 2 lety +1

      'And it is as of this point that we have a completely new game'

  • @charlesmugleston6144
    @charlesmugleston6144 Před 2 lety +5

    This is beautiful - thank you so much to you both. The photograph of the early Persian Chess pieces possibly from Nishapur, Iran ought to remind people of the world famous multi-million selling poem - the Mystical Masterpiece... the Ruba'iya't of Omar Khayya'm as translated by Edward FitzGerald of Woodbridge, Suffolk, UK. Do see the Omar Khayyam Theatre Company - wide screen.

  • @GMeier-cu1kf
    @GMeier-cu1kf Před 3 lety +5

    Fantastic interview!

  • @paulheydarian1281
    @paulheydarian1281 Před rokem +1

    What I love about the chess set from Neishapur, Iran, is that it leaves more to the imagination. I like the abstract pieces.

  • @marthadunkley6758
    @marthadunkley6758 Před 2 lety +3

    Alternate versions of chess in my youth were 1. Quick Take (winner is the player who gives away all their pieces), 2. Rifles (taking a piece does not involve moving the taking piece), and 3. Double chess (two moves each -first cannot be a check-).

  • @archivist17
    @archivist17 Před 3 lety +6

    Irving Finkel is such a source of knowledge and understanding.

  • @mycommentpwnz
    @mycommentpwnz Před 3 lety +2

    there is something very beautiful about that 12 century chess(?) set.
    you can almost see the love/passion it's creator had for the game, whatever game it may have been.

  • @scribbler2530
    @scribbler2530 Před 3 lety +6

    In case you're interested, if you were to double the number of grains of rice on each successive square of a chessboard, starting with 1 grain on the first square, (according to the anecdote by the wonderful Mr Finkel at around 9:02), by the time you get to the 64th square you would be the proud owner of 9,223,372,036,854,780,000 grains of rice...

    • @veridicusmaximus6010
      @veridicusmaximus6010 Před 2 lety

      Enough to feed Asia for a day ;)

    • @igrim4777
      @igrim4777 Před rokem

      Positive integer powers of 2 always end in a 2, 4, 6 or 8 so that should have been the first clue you were wrong. If you had written 9.223 372 036 854 78 × 10^18 or said about you would have been fine but as you specified 19 digits of precision not 15 and got the last 5 wrong your value is wrong. The correct value is 9 223 372 036 854 775 808

    • @scribbler2530
      @scribbler2530 Před rokem

      @@igrim4777 curse you Microsoft Excel...

  • @Haplo-san
    @Haplo-san Před 3 dny

    In Turkish chess, bishop still called elephant(fil); knight is horse(at), rook is castle(kale), queen is vizier(vezir) and king is shah(şah). Pawn is called "piyon" which comes from French word "pion" and it means "infantry/foot soldier" in French. Also "chess" called "satranç" which comes from Persian word "şaṭranc" which comes from Indian word "chaturanga" .

  • @charleshuguley9323
    @charleshuguley9323 Před rokem

    Dr. Finkel's presentations are always fascinating and entertaining.

  • @isabellalive2.081
    @isabellalive2.081 Před 2 lety +1

    Wonderful, And Fun! Thank you.

  • @danielgautreau161
    @danielgautreau161 Před 2 lety +3

    I once saw a photo in a book of a set of chess pieces made of bread by a prisoner of a Nazi concentration camp, so that he could play chess with another prisoner.

  • @nunyanunya4147
    @nunyanunya4147 Před 2 lety +7

    its so nice ot see a master time traveling wizard pretend to be a british intelectual, all the cleaver little ways he gaslights us away from understanding his secret like 'we dont have a lot ov archelogical research but ~i~ think...'
    i see through you, your secret is safe with me but take me with you when you go back please... i have nothing else to learn here.

  • @jamesleonard2870
    @jamesleonard2870 Před 2 lety +4

    I would agree with Mr. Finkel is correct that knight can jump. I would also imagine that the speed and ability with which Calvary can out flank it’s enemies would explain the change in direction of the piece.

  • @authormichellefranklin
    @authormichellefranklin Před rokem +1

    Dr Finkle is the best!

  • @Northcountry1926
    @Northcountry1926 Před 3 lety +6

    Irving ⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️

  • @bipolarbear9917
    @bipolarbear9917 Před 3 lety +6

    Please do a similar Irving Finkel presentation on the 'Extraordinary Origins of Backgammon' including the much lesser known history in China where it was called 'Shuanglu Qi' which translates to 'Double Land' or in another interpretation as 'Double Sixes' which theoretically would be Shuang Liu'. From what I've discovered from the scant English language materials on the subject in China, it was very popular in China for 1,500-2,000 years, but has now become completely forgotten in present-day Chinese culture. Chinese Chess, Mah Jiang, and Go being the most popular games in China these days. I'd just love to re-introduce the wonderful game of Shuanglu Qi (Backgammon, Nard, Shesh Besh,Tabula, Takhteh, Tavli, Tavla, Ban-Sugoroku, Ssang-ryuk etc.) to modern Chinese culture.

    • @theporticolibrary1295
      @theporticolibrary1295  Před 2 lety

      Hi Steve. Thanks for your suggestion. That's a great idea. We'll talk to Irving about it. In the meantime, have a look at the Library's other talks, activities, and exhibitions at www.theportico.org.uk and please donate if you can to help us create more events and run our charitable programmes.

    • @bipolarbear9917
      @bipolarbear9917 Před 2 lety

      @@theporticolibrary1295 Wow! I posted that comment 9 months ago. It took you long enough to reply. Lol! Please do look into the history 'Shuanglu Qi', how and when it was introduced into China, and why it disappeared. I found one reference that it was banned during the Qing Dynasty, but I'm not certain of this. I'd be interested if you can give me any leads, even if they're in Chinese, I maybe able to use some translation software to get the gist of it. Thanks.

  • @MarcoSilesio
    @MarcoSilesio Před rokem +1

    wonderful

  • @owentaylor9884
    @owentaylor9884 Před 2 lety +2

    The rook is the archer who shoots straight, the Bishop is shifty and goes diagonaly. The Knight to jump diagonaly to break the sheild-wall

  • @Hh-yd3dj
    @Hh-yd3dj Před 6 měsíci

    Damn, i like this guy. Dude has awesome charisma. I really enjoyed this. Thank you

  • @Big_Dai
    @Big_Dai Před 2 lety +4

    Wait wait.. you can't just randomly say that you need bananas if you are to have a Giraffe piece and not comment further!!

  • @SirBoden
    @SirBoden Před 3 lety +2

    Wonderful discussion
    Thank you

    • @theporticolibrary1295
      @theporticolibrary1295  Před 2 lety

      Great to hear that you enjoyed it Boden. If you'd like to see more from the Library, please visit www.theportico.org.uk

  • @watleythewizard2381
    @watleythewizard2381 Před 3 lety +6

    Study of games is an important anthropology.
    I believe the limited move of the king piece reflects the actual limits of a ruler in a court society. Limited by creed and law, by politics, by the need to try to cover all bases and keep all the powerful nobles on side, a monarch is nearly always handicapped and rarely absolute (some French monarchs excepted). Rank may have privileges but is also has shackles.

  • @waynenocton
    @waynenocton Před 3 lety +5

    I’ve always felt that the player is actually the king piece, he had to survive, would never be on the battlefield in actual battle, it’s his mind that was used.

  • @harryzero1566
    @harryzero1566 Před rokem

    The Harry Potter story made me recall that wonderful scene in the Thomas Crown affair, where the lead actress exotically caresses the smooth dome head of her bishop, whilst emphasising her ploy with her foot under the table.

  • @RalphEllis
    @RalphEllis Před 3 lety +8

    Donkeys for knights. This was reality.
    Rollo Ganger, who founded the Norman nation, was known as the ganger because his feet touched the ground on his horse. Shetland and Norse horses were quite small.
    R

  • @frankharr9466
    @frankharr9466 Před 2 lety +2

    I don't think that chess started as an instructional tool for battle. That's because in chess, both sides are equal, you start in the same place, you take turns and the goal the capture of the king. And that's nothing LIKE a battle. I think it wa a way for soldiers to relax. A way to play at battle in a very low-stakes manner.
    Also, if you think of a knight as an L-shape move, of course it makes no sense. But if you look at it another way, it's one step orthoginally and one step diagianlly. That's equivalent to the L-shape, but crucially, it's a mix of bishop and rook and the knight starts right between them.
    This is a great video I hope my rambling doesn't suggest that I think otherwise.

    • @seedmonchermonchcronch3222
      @seedmonchermonchcronch3222 Před měsícem

      The theory isn't that chess represents the battlefield, it's that the game which was the ancestor of chess, but very different, was meant to represent the battlefield

  • @newkingjames1757
    @newkingjames1757 Před 9 měsíci

    "What change would you make?" Un-Castling, which would allow you to reverse a castling move back to their original positions.

  • @hurdygurdyguy1
    @hurdygurdyguy1 Před 3 lety +4

    6:00 ... too bloody for a boardgame! Edgar Rice Burroughs for his book The Chessmen of Mars adapted chess into the game of Jetan which is described as being very popular (in fact Martian soldiers carry with them small versions of the game to while away the hours between conflicts). The "Chessmen" had an arena sized board with actual people as pieces. When a "piece" moved into an opponent's square they would fight to the death for to determine who would occupy the square.

  • @harryzero1566
    @harryzero1566 Před rokem

    Chess for me, is the temporary psychological domination of one over another.
    The advantage being that the domination being only temporary.
    The representation of the pieces for best effect, need to be recognised not from looking but from scanning.
    The difference between listening and hearing if you like.

  • @Dannil1
    @Dannil1 Před 2 lety

    Wow, great job, can't believe how fun this conversation was., fascinating...

  • @jeromebarry1741
    @jeromebarry1741 Před rokem

    Vietnamese chess, a real thing, is very interesting. I bought a Vietnamese chess set at a Vietnamese market in Dallas in the early 1980's and played Vietnamese chess with my Vietnamese immigrant colleagues.

  • @almac2598
    @almac2598 Před 2 lety +1

    If you want to see passion in a board game, watch a bunch of Royal Navy Sailors playing Uckers (a grown up form of Ludo). Careers have depended (or ended) on the outcome!

  • @twistersidecontrol
    @twistersidecontrol Před 2 lety

    Your soul is basically unstoppable

  • @seedmonchermonchcronch3222
    @seedmonchermonchcronch3222 Před měsícem

    Every time I read the comments under a Dr. Finkle video I feel like half the people didn't even watch the whole thing, maybe even none of it and just read the title. There are so many interesting things to point out and ask about yet so many people just show ignorance about things which are explained later in the video

  • @joebombero1
    @joebombero1 Před 3 lety +4

    Is it true that everything came from India? Fun having friends from Iran and India and one of them discovers Aesop's Fables or Plato on your bookshelf. Listen to the argument -
    "This was stolen from Persia"
    "And where did Persia get it? From India!"
    OMG on and on hahaha. Plumbing, agriculture, domesticated dogs hahaha.

  • @clocksfinle7
    @clocksfinle7 Před rokem +1

    ah yes, queens gambit.👌 an excellent story about a young alien that gets adopted by jimmy page

  • @basyngwie
    @basyngwie Před rokem

    There's a 15th century painting of death playing chess against a man in Täby church in Sweden. Apparently the inspiration for the similar scene in Bergman's "The seventh seal".

  • @walterb2531
    @walterb2531 Před rokem

    Concerning, the origin of the Knight move, one theory that I have read is that a very early version of the game had a 5x5 board. Place a Rook and a Bishopv(which in early forms of chess only moved in a checker-like diagonal hopping move), and these two pieces cover all the squares of the 5x5 board Except for the oblique 8 oblique squares. The knight move was (in this theory) invented to cover these 8 squares and no others.

  • @jedgrahek1426
    @jedgrahek1426 Před 2 lety +1

    26:00 Irving Finkel's roundabout way of saying "Damn Anya Taylor-Joy is so hot" lol

  • @tomdooley3522
    @tomdooley3522 Před 3 lety +4

    Gandalf the Grey. ?
    He certainly is an elderly wizard .

  • @AndreaSzabo7171
    @AndreaSzabo7171 Před 5 měsíci

    💘💘💘. 💞. 😃
    Today will Now Be Brilliant.
    Thank You. 😃
    Been playing since I was 2. 👉
    Isince ( 1973 )

  • @maryb6074
    @maryb6074 Před 6 měsíci +1

    It is very funny that it started with a chess items from Persia and tried to tell stories about invention in India ( without any evidence) and make stories about playing chess in England. Don't you think the main part of it which is Persian chess is missing?😅😅

  • @bcn1gh7h4wk
    @bcn1gh7h4wk Před 2 lety +2

    "The Queen's Gambit is absolutely brilliant!"
    you might want to mind the fact that it's the story of a kid addicted to sleeping pills, who throws her life out the window to pursue a first prize in competitive chess tournaments.
    it's not a story of self-improvement or hope.... it's a story of addiction and self-destruction that just happens to end on a high note by being placed in an environment of disproportionately high rewards to the already high risk.
    you take that story and use it as a guiding example to drive the life of a person, and chances are, they gonna end up dead.
    just because Beth succeeded doing that, doesn't mean anyone else will, at the same thing, or in the same way.

    • @marthadunkley6758
      @marthadunkley6758 Před 2 lety +2

      *sigh* "The Queen's Gambit follows the life of an orphan chess prodigy, Elizabeth Harmon, during her quest to become an elite chess player while struggling with emotional problems, drugs and alcohol dependency."

    • @bcn1gh7h4wk
      @bcn1gh7h4wk Před 2 lety +1

      @@marthadunkley6758 yes, exactly. My problem is not with the people who see the story as a story, my problem is with the people who *identify* with characters they see on screen.
      "Oh, this girl is a total wreck! And she succeeds! How inspiring! I'm gonna be a total wreck too!"

  • @General1Cal
    @General1Cal Před rokem

    I love that people developed themselves while essential personnel just worked around the clock, I feel no different than prior to covd19, actually I do feel a bit more poor. 😭😭

  • @_Wai_Wai_
    @_Wai_Wai_ Před 2 lety

    In Xiangqi we have two pieces that move, attack like the rook and it is called the chariot piece.

  • @SirBoden
    @SirBoden Před 3 lety +4

    Horse move is a cavalry flank

  • @markrossow6303
    @markrossow6303 Před 2 lety

    we have a Korean set -- game has 2 Queens, and different movies, an King is limeted to a 9x9 area...

  • @tolkienfan1972
    @tolkienfan1972 Před 13 dny

    If the king had the moves of the queen it would be far harder to checkmate.

  • @Dbean48
    @Dbean48 Před 2 lety +1

    If you look at the picture closely in the Queens Gambit, some of the pieces are replaced with little liqueur sample bottles, guess if captured you get to drink it down.. more staggering moves ahead in the game of chess.

  • @mikew506
    @mikew506 Před 3 lety +4

    I believe the less figurative chess pieces where designed by the owner to confuse his opponent !

  • @eddaustin
    @eddaustin Před 3 lety

    Simply amazing

    • @theporticolibrary1295
      @theporticolibrary1295  Před 2 lety

      Thanks for watching Ed. If you'd like to see the exhibition, it's online at www.theportico.org.uk/fun-and-games

  • @whisped8145
    @whisped8145 Před 11 měsíci

    26:00 The King is the most important piece. A king acts through his agents; he does not do everything in his realm or on his battlefied personally - what point then of an army? I don't agree with Dr Finkle's description of the tired shy king here. Even on the battlefield the king has of course an honour guard with him.
    The queen's upgrade however has many more influences that I would assume some polite chap like Dr Finkle wouldn't dare say directly to a woman, especially such a friendly one. The new rule or version was also known as the "Mad Queen's Chess" which is the version we mainly play today. The "mad queen" is a hysterical woman, or in a friendlier interpretation projecting the reach of her own games of intrigue. The meanest interpretation would be that in order to get the women interested in the game, one would appeal to their narcissism and make the piece representing them some all powerful Mary Sue who could do everything compared to everyone else. A cruel power fantasy so to say. Something we see in today's badly written media quite a lot, and hopefully dying down soon again. - The mentioned TV show "The Queen's Gambit" is similarly such a power fantasy appealing to just that, for there is no historical precedent for what happens in the show. It is a mere fantasy of a "strong women" outdoing all the men in what they're great at.
    Narcissism is of course not a solely female thing, but this is an expression of it. As Dr Finkle said himself, I would have enjoyed more women to play with as well, but alas barely any are interested in such games. Be it chess, shogi, go or the like. More colourful and less abstract boardgames, like Archipelago, or with even more social aspects in the game's narrative changes that a bit.

  • @amadeus_k2466
    @amadeus_k2466 Před 6 měsíci

    About the red vs black pieces: In Alice in Wonderland (or behind the mirrrors?) there is the Red Queen; could it be that Lewis Caroll took his inspiration from the Lewis chess set?

  • @brickingle3984
    @brickingle3984 Před 2 lety +2

    Hilarious to find out that a national scholar watches chess CZcams videos lol

  • @MichaelMarko
    @MichaelMarko Před 2 lety

    Love Finkel.

  • @GerHanssen
    @GerHanssen Před 2 lety +2

    I am a bit surprised about the assumption here, that Western chess is the culmination of chess. The final one and only result of a long evolution of substeps leading to this glorious summit. I know of at least 3 other forms of chess, one of which is played by more people than Western chess.
    They can be found in East Asia. All of them are viable and stable forms of the game, with professionalism and publicity in the media in various ways. The most played form of chess is played in China: JiangJi, the elephant chess. Then there is the Korean variation on the same board, but the pieces go a bit differently. But for me at the summit of chess evolution is shogi, Japanese chess played on a 9x9 board. Positional judgement is much more important than the balance of the pieces compared to Western chess. Handicaps can be applied. Draws are very rare. It is just a better game.
    I would have liked this video to treat these other forms of chess as serious other forms of principally the same game.

  • @AtticusStount
    @AtticusStount Před 3 lety +2

    I would stop the Queen being able to move so many squares, and knights would be able to take pieces they jump over. There are variants of chess, like CrazyHouse, where you convert and place pieces you've taken.

  • @jpdemer5
    @jpdemer5 Před rokem

    White pieces were ivory; green pieces probably originated as jade.

  • @herrklamm1454
    @herrklamm1454 Před 3 lety +1

    Any relation to Ray? THE LACES WERE IN!!

  • @andreiveldman2000
    @andreiveldman2000 Před 2 lety +1

    I agree that Dr. Irving Finkel is an amazing (and amusing) source of knowledge, but I have to take issue with his statement that his white and red chess set was new in modern times and that no one has seen white and red pieces before: in Lewis Carroll’s “Through the Looking Glass”, Alice is definitely encountering the Red Queen and King, and the rest of the red pieces.

    • @juhonieminen4219
      @juhonieminen4219 Před 2 lety

      The RED queen in wonderland is the Queen of Hearts, from the 52 piece deck of cards. Why the cards are black and red? That might arise from the same history of red ink, because the roman soldiers had red tunics for the reason of red paint being potent, visible and long lasting after drying.

    • @andreiveldman2000
      @andreiveldman2000 Před 2 lety +2

      @@juhonieminen4219 I think you may be mixing up "Alice in Wonderland" which indeed takes playing cards as a theme, and Lewis Carroll's other novel "Through the Looking-Glass" which is based on a chess problem with a chess set of white and RED pieces. I was referring to the latter.

    • @juhonieminen4219
      @juhonieminen4219 Před 2 lety

      I don't own a copy of The Looking Glass book, but I have a chess set with red and green pieces. It is mainly a question of material choice, but maybe Lewis Carroll had a historical point to make? Or maybe he too had a randon set with red pieces and it was based on real life experience?

    • @pandoorloki1232
      @pandoorloki1232 Před 2 lety

      @@juhonieminen4219 The Red Queen and the Queen of Hearts are different characters.

    • @pandoorloki1232
      @pandoorloki1232 Před 2 lety

      "I have to take issue with his statement that his white and red chess set was new in modern times and that no one has seen white and red pieces before"
      He never said that.

  • @pandoorloki1232
    @pandoorloki1232 Před 2 lety

    That comment about changing chess to have a "speedy" version was stunningly ignorant. There already is such chess, called blitz, and it is very popular among chess players, with tournaments and ratings.

  • @philipstevenson5166
    @philipstevenson5166 Před 2 lety +1

    Elaborate pieces have little relevance to the game, which is about visualizing abstract possibilties.

  • @willemceuleers3789
    @willemceuleers3789 Před rokem

    couldn't it be that bishops were totally unexceptable in protestant Germany and the Netherlands and consequently were replaced by 'Läufer' and 'lopers'?
    Cheers, Willem (Belgium)

  • @hopewellsmit7819
    @hopewellsmit7819 Před 2 lety

    it was more than a game he sold

  • @Katey2012able
    @Katey2012able Před 3 lety +1

    What happens to the game if you make a 3 - person chess board? What new strategies and theories emerge?

  • @tarjei99
    @tarjei99 Před rokem

    Carcassonne is not a game of Indian origin.

  • @caloyssk1
    @caloyssk1 Před 2 měsíci

    💪😉

  • @theodorepage6087
    @theodorepage6087 Před 3 lety +1

    To get the age the chess pieces that has only three pieces. The age of firearms first appeared in China about 14 10 which the great Mr finkle would have known

  • @FireflyOnTheMoon
    @FireflyOnTheMoon Před 2 lety

    Exploding chess!

  • @mgk284
    @mgk284 Před rokem

    03:04