翻訳と辞書
Words near each other
・ Svilengrad
・ Svilengrad Municipality
・ Svilengrad railway station
・ Svileuva
・ Svilile
・ Svilići
・ Svilna
・ Svilojevo
・ Sviloš
・ Svetovidovia lucullus
・ Svetovrachene Glacier
・ Svetozar
・ Svetozar Boroević
・ Svetozar Cvetković
・ Svetozar Delić
Svetozar Gligorić
・ Svetozar Ivačković
・ Svetozar Koljević
・ Svetozar Kurepa
・ Svetozar Marković
・ Svetozar Marković secondary school, Novi Sad
・ Svetozar Marović
・ Svetozar Mijin
・ Svetozar Miletić
・ Svetozar Miletić (village)
・ Svetozar Miletić vocational secondary school, Novi Sad
・ Svetozar Popović
・ Svetozar Pribićević
・ Svetozar Ristovski
・ Svetozar Sasa Kovacevic


Dictionary Lists
翻訳と辞書 辞書検索 [ 開発暫定版 ]
スポンサード リンク

Svetozar Gligorić : ウィキペディア英語版
Svetozar Gligorić

Svetozar Gligorić ((セルビア語:Светозар Глигорић), 2 February 1923 – 14 August 2012) was a Serbian and Yugoslavian chess grandmaster. He won the championship of Yugoslavia a record twelve times, and is considered the best player ever from Serbia. In 1958 he was declared the best athlete of Yugoslavia.
In the 1950s and 1960s Gligorić was one of the top players in the world, and also among the world's most popular, owing to his globe-trotting tournament schedule and a particularly engaging personality, reflected in the title of his autobiography, ''I Play Against Pieces''. (I.e., playing without hostility toward the opponent, or playing differently against different players for "psychological" reasons; playing the board and not the man.)
== Life ==
Gligorić was born in Belgrade to a poor family. According to his recollections, his first exposure to chess was as a small child watching patrons play in a neighborhood bar. He began to play at the age of eleven, when taught by a boarder taken in by his mother (his father had died by this time). Lacking a chess set, he made one for himself by carving pieces from corks from wine bottles—a story paralleling the formative years of his contemporary, the renowned Estonian grandmaster Paul Keres.
Gligorić was a good student during his youth, with both academic and athletic successes that famously led to him to be invited to represent his school at a birthday celebration for Prince Peter, who later became King Peter II of Yugoslavia. He later recounted to International Master David Levy (who chronicled his chess career in ''The Chess of Gligoric'') his distress at attending this gala event wearing poor clothing stemming from his family's impoverished condition. His first tournament success came in 1938 when he won the Belgrade Chess Club championship; however, World War II interrupted his chess progress for a time. During the war, Gligorić was a member of a partisan unit. A chance encounter with a chess-playing partisan officer led to his removal from combat.
Following World War II, Gligorić worked for several years as a journalist and organizer of chess tournaments. He continued to progress as a player and was awarded the International Master (IM) title in 1950 and the Grandmaster (GM) title in 1951, eventually making the transition to full-time chess professional. He continued active tournament play well into his sixties.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
ウィキペディアで「Svetozar Gligorić」の詳細全文を読む



スポンサード リンク
翻訳と辞書 : 翻訳のためのインターネットリソース

Copyright(C) kotoba.ne.jp 1997-2016. All Rights Reserved.