Louis-Charles Mahé de La Bourdonnais

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Louis de La Bourdonnais
Full name Louis-Charles Mahé de La Bourdonnais
Country France
Born 1795
France
Died 1840 (aged 44 or 45)
World Champion 1821–40 (Unofficial)

Louis-Charles Mahé de La Bourdonnais (1795–1840) was a French chess master, possibly the strongest player in the early 19th century.

Contents

[edit] Early life

La Bourdonnais was born on the island of La Réunion in the Indian Ocean in 1797. He learned chess in 1814 and began to take the game seriously in 1818, when he regularly played at the Café de la Régence.[1] He took lessons from Jacques François Mouret, his first teacher,[2] and within two years he became one of the best players of the Café.

La Bourdonnais was forced to earn his living as a professional chess player after squandering his fortune on ill-advised land deals.

[edit] Unofficial World Chess Champion

La Bourdonnais was considered to be the unofficial World Chess Champion (there was no official title at the time) from 1821—when he became able to beat his chess teacher Alexandre Deschapelles—until his death in 1840. The most famous match series, indeed considered as the world championship, was the series against Alexander McDonnell in 1834.

[edit] Death

He died penniless in London in 1840, having been forced to sell all of his possessions, including his clothes, to satisfy his creditors. George Walker arranged to have him buried just a stone's throw away from his old rival Alexander McDonnell in London's Kensal Green Cemetery.[3][4]

He was the grandson of Bertrand-François Mahé de La Bourdonnais.

[edit] Notable games

McDonnell–La Bourdonnais, 1834
Solid white.svg a b c d e f g h Solid white.svg
8  black king  black king  black king  black bishop  black king  black king  black rook  black king 8
7  black king  black king  black king  white pawn  black king  black king  black pawn  black pawn 7
6  black king  black king  black king  black king  black king  black king  black king  black king 6
5  black pawn  black king  black king  black king  black king  black king  black king  black king 5
4  black king  black king  black king  black king  black king  black king  black king  black king 4
3  black king  black king  white queen  black king  black king  black king  black king  black king 3
2  white pawn  black king  black king  black pawn  black pawn  black pawn  white pawn  white pawn 2
1  black king  black king  black king  white rook  black king  black king  black king  white king 1
Solid white.svg a b c d e f g h Solid white.svg
Final position after Black's 37...e2

[edit] See also

[edit] Notes

  1. ^ The Oxford Companion to Chess – David Hooper and Kenneth Whyld (1992) p. 56
  2. ^ La Palamède edited by St. Amaint (1847) p. 211
  3. ^ Philip W. Sergeant, A Century of British Chess, David McKay, 1934, p. 39.
  4. ^ Walker, George (1850). Chess and Chess-Players. London: C. J. Skeet. 

[edit] References

[edit] External links

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