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- Q3821507 subject Q16775753.
- Q3821507 subject Q8357910.
- Q3821507 subject Q8358056.
- Q3821507 abstract "The Walker Chess-player was a chess-playing "machine" created by the Walker Brothers of Baltimore, Maryland. The machine was produced in the 1820s to compete with The Turk, a world-famous chess "machine". Johann Nepomuk Mälzel, a Bavarian musician with an interest in various machines and devices who owned and operated the Turk, viewed the competing machine and attempted to buy it, but the offer was declined and the duplicate machine toured for a number of years, never receiving the fame that Mälzel's machine did, and eventually fell into obscurity.These 19th-century machines were hoaxes that disguised a human player with stage-magic devices; unlike modern chess playing machines which play without human intervention, such as Belle.".
- Q3821507 wikiPageWikiLink Q1122588.
- Q3821507 wikiPageWikiLink Q148442.
- Q3821507 wikiPageWikiLink Q16775753.
- Q3821507 wikiPageWikiLink Q2029233.
- Q3821507 wikiPageWikiLink Q2746807.
- Q3821507 wikiPageWikiLink Q275924.
- Q3821507 wikiPageWikiLink Q5092.
- Q3821507 wikiPageWikiLink Q60.
- Q3821507 wikiPageWikiLink Q718.
- Q3821507 wikiPageWikiLink Q8357910.
- Q3821507 wikiPageWikiLink Q8358056.
- Q3821507 wikiPageWikiLink Q980.
- Q3821507 comment "The Walker Chess-player was a chess-playing "machine" created by the Walker Brothers of Baltimore, Maryland. The machine was produced in the 1820s to compete with The Turk, a world-famous chess "machine".".
- Q3821507 label "Walker Chess-player".