Matches in DBpedia 2016-04 for { <http://dbpedia.org/resource/Marcus_Kann> ?p ?o }
Showing triples 1 to 67 of
67
with 100 triples per page.
- Marcus_Kann abstract "Marcus Kann (1820 in Vienna – February 3, 1886) was an Austrian chess player.Kann and Horatio Caro jointly analysed and published their analysis of the chess opening later to-be-called Caro-Kann Defence, (1.e4 c6) in the German Bruederschaft magazine in 1886. During the 4th German Chess Congress in Hamburg in May 1885, Kann defeated German-British chess champion Jacques Mieses with the Caro-Kann Defence (ECO B12) in just 17 moves. This game by Kann was added to the final tournament book, but his games from the main tournament, where he earned four points from seven games, failing to qualify to win his group, remain unpublished. The magazine Deutsche Schachzeitung (1886, p. 128) published a short obituary after his death.".
- Marcus_Kann birthDate "1820".
- Marcus_Kann birthYear "1820".
- Marcus_Kann deathDate "1886-02-03".
- Marcus_Kann deathYear "1886".
- Marcus_Kann wikiPageID "31025593".
- Marcus_Kann wikiPageLength "2147".
- Marcus_Kann wikiPageOutDegree "15".
- Marcus_Kann wikiPageRevisionID "656462411".
- Marcus_Kann wikiPageWikiLink Caro–Kann_Defence.
- Marcus_Kann wikiPageWikiLink Category:1820_births.
- Marcus_Kann wikiPageWikiLink Category:1886_deaths.
- Marcus_Kann wikiPageWikiLink Category:Austrian_chess_players.
- Marcus_Kann wikiPageWikiLink Category:Chess_theoreticians.
- Marcus_Kann wikiPageWikiLink Category:Sportspeople_from_Vienna.
- Marcus_Kann wikiPageWikiLink Chess.
- Marcus_Kann wikiPageWikiLink Chess_opening.
- Marcus_Kann wikiPageWikiLink Encyclopaedia_of_Chess_Openings.
- Marcus_Kann wikiPageWikiLink German_Chess_Championship.
- Marcus_Kann wikiPageWikiLink Hamburg.
- Marcus_Kann wikiPageWikiLink Horatio_Caro.
- Marcus_Kann wikiPageWikiLink Jacques_Mieses.
- Marcus_Kann wikiPageWikiLink Vienna.
- Marcus_Kann wikiPageWikiLinkText "Marcus Kann".
- Marcus_Kann dateOfBirth "1820".
- Marcus_Kann dateOfDeath "1886-02-03".
- Marcus_Kann name "Kann, Marcus".
- Marcus_Kann shortDescription "Austrian chess player".
- Marcus_Kann wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Austria-chess-bio-stub.
- Marcus_Kann wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Chess_diagram.
- Marcus_Kann wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Chess_notation.
- Marcus_Kann wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Chessgames_player.
- Marcus_Kann wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Persondata.
- Marcus_Kann wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Reflist.
- Marcus_Kann description "Austrian chess player".
- Marcus_Kann description "Austrian chess player".
- Marcus_Kann subject Category:1820_births.
- Marcus_Kann subject Category:1886_deaths.
- Marcus_Kann subject Category:Austrian_chess_players.
- Marcus_Kann subject Category:Chess_theoreticians.
- Marcus_Kann subject Category:Sportspeople_from_Vienna.
- Marcus_Kann hypernym Kann.
- Marcus_Kann type Agent.
- Marcus_Kann type Person.
- Marcus_Kann type Person.
- Marcus_Kann type Agent.
- Marcus_Kann type NaturalPerson.
- Marcus_Kann type Thing.
- Marcus_Kann type Q215627.
- Marcus_Kann type Q5.
- Marcus_Kann type Person.
- Marcus_Kann comment "Marcus Kann (1820 in Vienna – February 3, 1886) was an Austrian chess player.Kann and Horatio Caro jointly analysed and published their analysis of the chess opening later to-be-called Caro-Kann Defence, (1.e4 c6) in the German Bruederschaft magazine in 1886. During the 4th German Chess Congress in Hamburg in May 1885, Kann defeated German-British chess champion Jacques Mieses with the Caro-Kann Defence (ECO B12) in just 17 moves.".
- Marcus_Kann label "Marcus Kann".
- Marcus_Kann sameAs Q86090.
- Marcus_Kann sameAs Marcus_Kann.
- Marcus_Kann sameAs Marcus_Kann.
- Marcus_Kann sameAs Markuss_Kanns.
- Marcus_Kann sameAs Marcus_Kann.
- Marcus_Kann sameAs m.0ggbdkx.
- Marcus_Kann sameAs Канн,_Маркус.
- Marcus_Kann sameAs Q86090.
- Marcus_Kann wasDerivedFrom Marcus_Kann?oldid=656462411.
- Marcus_Kann givenName "Marcus".
- Marcus_Kann isPrimaryTopicOf Marcus_Kann.
- Marcus_Kann name "Kann, Marcus".
- Marcus_Kann name "Marcus Kann".
- Marcus_Kann surname "Kann".