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Nicolas Rossolimo : ウィキペディア英語版
Nicolas Rossolimo

Nicolas Rossolimo ((ロシア語:Николай Спиридонович Россолимо); February 28, 1910, Kiev – July 24, 1975, New York) was an American-French-Greek-Russian chess Grandmaster. He emigrated to France in 1929 and was many times champion of Paris. In 1952 he emigrated to the United States, and won the 1955 U.S. Open Chess Championship.
The Rossolimo Variation of the Sicilian Defence bears his name.
==Biography and chess career==
Nikolai Spiridonovich Rossolimo (Russian: Николай Спиридонович Россолимо) was born in Ukraine when it was part of the Russian Empire, to Spiridon Rossolimo, a Russian painter and portraitist of Greek ancestry, and his wife née Xenia Nikolaevna Skugarevskaya, an aristocratic writer and war correspondent.〔Globe Trotter, "Дневник 1899–1906", New York: Rausen Bros., 1951.〕 He was a nephew of the famous Russian neurologist and psychiatrist Grigory Ivanovich Rossolimo. He lived in Moscow during the mid-1920s, and moved to Paris with his Russian mother in 1929.
Having finished second behind former World Champion José Raúl Capablanca in a tournament in Paris in 1938, he won the French Championship in 1948.〔(Championnats de France ) 〕 Moreover, he was Paris Champion a record seven times, and drew two matches in 1948 and 1949 with Savielly Tartakower. In 1955 he won the U.S. Open Championship held in Long Beach, California, on tiebreaks ahead of Samuel Reshevsky. The prize was a new Buick automobile.
Rossolimo played for France in the Chess Olympiads of 1950 and 1972, and for the United States in 1958, 1960, and 1966.〔(OlimpBase Men's Chess Olympiads Nicolas Rossolimo )〕 He was awarded the International Master title in 1950 and the International Grandmaster title in 1953.
In 1952, he moved to the U.S. with his wife Véra and son Alexander to rejoin his mother and Greek father in New York. (After moving to the U.S., his first name was often spelled "Nicholas".) In New York he worked as a waiter, a taxi driver, played the accordion and worked as a singer, and ran a chess studio as well to support himself and his family. The legendary Rossolimo Chess Studio was located in Greenwich Village in Manhattan. It was somewhat like a café that served food and drinks, and also sold chess sets and books, but where members of the public – including famous artists such as Marcel Duchamp – could come and play chess with each other, and occasionally play Rossolimo himself for a fee (Rossolimo would play simultaneous chess with many of the patrons).
Rossolimo died of head injuries following a fall down a flight of stairs, just after finishing third in his final event, the 1975 World Open.〔(Nicholas Rossolimo: 1910–1975. Requiem for a Grand Master, by Jerry Kantor ) // The Village Voice – Aug 25, 1975.〕 He was buried in a Russian Orthodox cemetery in New Jersey.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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