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- Q3314573 subject Q6955958.
- Q3314573 subject Q8358093.
- Q3314573 abstract "Romantic chess was the style of chess prevalent until the 1880s. It was characterized by swashbuckling attacks, clever combinations, brash piece sacrifices and dynamic games. Winning was secondary to winning with style. These games were focused more on artistic expression, rather than technical mastery or long-term planning. The Romantic era of play was followed by the Scientific, Hypermodern, and New Dynamism eras. It was considered unsporting to decline a gambit (the sacrifice of a pawn or piece to obtain an attack). It is no coincidence that the most popular openings played by the Romantics were the King's Gambit Accepted and the Evans Gambit Accepted. Some of the major players of the Romantic era were Adolf Anderssen, Paul Morphy and Henry Blackburne. A famous game of this time is the Immortal Game between Anderssen and Lionel Kieseritzky. The Romantic style was effectively ended on the highest level by Wilhelm Steinitz, who, with his more positional approach, crushed all of his contemporaries. This domination ushered in a new age of chess known as the "Modern", or Classical school.The Romantic Era in the Arts (notably classical music and poetry) was roughly analogous to the chess world. Existing as time contemporaries with each other, the arts were focused on emotional expression more than technical mastery. This would come to an end towards the end of the 19th century as evolution in the arts (Impressionist music and Symbolist poetry) aligned closely time-wise with Steinitz' emergence as the new stylistic force in the chess world. Some notable chess masters have argued that chess is an art form in addition to a science.".
- Q3314573 wikiPageWikiLink Q102648.
- Q3314573 wikiPageWikiLink Q105589.
- Q3314573 wikiPageWikiLink Q1139394.
- Q3314573 wikiPageWikiLink Q164800.
- Q3314573 wikiPageWikiLink Q194506.
- Q3314573 wikiPageWikiLink Q208544.
- Q3314573 wikiPageWikiLink Q313177.
- Q3314573 wikiPageWikiLink Q3446947.
- Q3314573 wikiPageWikiLink Q352459.
- Q3314573 wikiPageWikiLink Q37068.
- Q3314573 wikiPageWikiLink Q471257.
- Q3314573 wikiPageWikiLink Q57155.
- Q3314573 wikiPageWikiLink Q681934.
- Q3314573 wikiPageWikiLink Q6955958.
- Q3314573 wikiPageWikiLink Q718.
- Q3314573 wikiPageWikiLink Q723704.
- Q3314573 wikiPageWikiLink Q8358093.
- Q3314573 wikiPageWikiLink Q837182.
- Q3314573 comment "Romantic chess was the style of chess prevalent until the 1880s. It was characterized by swashbuckling attacks, clever combinations, brash piece sacrifices and dynamic games. Winning was secondary to winning with style. These games were focused more on artistic expression, rather than technical mastery or long-term planning. The Romantic era of play was followed by the Scientific, Hypermodern, and New Dynamism eras.".
- Q3314573 label "Romantic chess".