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Siegbert Tarrasch : ウィキペディア英語版 | Siegbert Tarrasch
Siegbert Tarrasch (:ziːɡbɐt taraʃ) (5 March 1862 – 17 February 1934) was one of the strongest chess players and most influential chess teachers of the late 19th century and early 20th century. Tarrasch was born in Breslau (Wrocław), Prussian Silesia. Having finished school in 1880, he left Breslau to study medicine in Halle. With his family, he settled in Nuremberg, Bavaria, and later in Munich, setting up a successful medical practice. He had five children. Tarrasch was Jewish, converted to Christianity in 1909,〔(Chess Notes 5997 ) by Edward Winter (chess historian)〕 and a patriotic German who lost a son in World War I. Yet he faced antisemitism in the early stages of Nazism. ==Chess publications== Tarrasch's main books were: (i) ''Dreihundert Schachpartien'' (1895), translated by S. Schwarz as ''Three Hundred Chess Games'' (1999), (ii) ''Die moderne Schachpartie'' (1912), and (iii) ''Das Schachspiel'' (1931), translated by G. E. Smith and T. G. Bone as ''The Game of Chess'' (1935, ISBN 048625447X). The third is in three parts: the endgame, the middlegame and the opening. It was his last book and his most successful.
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