International correspondence chess grandmaster and International Correspondence Chess Grandmaster: Difference between pages
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Revision as of 11:02, 3 February 2007
A title created by the FIDE in 1953, second only to that of world correspondence champion. Now awarded by the International Correspondence Chess Federation. Titleholders include Mohammed Al-Thani, Roberto Alvarez, Ulf Andersson (Sweden), Vytautas Andriulaitis, Volker-Michael Anton, R. Arlauskas, Andreas Bachmann, Erik Bang, O. Barda, John Barlow, Fritz Baumbach, Ruben Berdichesky, Hans Jack Berliner (USA), Ivar Bern, Francis Jonathan Berry (Canada), Gabriel Blasberg, Maksim Blokh, Peter Boll, Igor Bondarevsky, G. Borisenko, Ing. Breazu, John Brookes, Stefan Brzozka, Heinrich Burger, Stephan Busemann, Anders Carlsson, Claudio Casabona, Jose Copie, Libor Danek, Massimo De Blasio, Joseph DeMauro, Peter Dubinin, Ernst Eichhorn, Ove Ekjebaerg, Hans-Marcus Elwert, L. Endzelins, Klaus Engel, Fabio Finocchiaro, Jozef Franzen, Niels Fries Nielsen, Marc Geenen, Dick Geet, Leon Gostisa, Gottardo Gottardi, Sergey Grodzensky, Mladen Gudyev, Wolfgang Haessler, Tunc Hamarat, Horst Handel, Curt Hansen, Abir Har-Even, Jean Hebert (Canada), Jonny Hector (Sweden), Paul Heilemann, Peter Hertel, Reijo Hiltunen, Adrian Hollis, Jaroslav Hybl, Abram Idema, Jan du Jardin, Maurice Johnson, Milan Jovcic, Ing. Keglevic, Heinz-Erich van Kempen, Abram Khasin, Sergey Khlusevich, David Kilgour, Robert Kiviaho (Canada), Jaako Kivimaki, Siegfried Kluve, Tero Kokkila, Igor Kopylov, Sergei Korolev, Martin Kreuzer, A. Lundquist, Juan Sebastian Morgado (Argentina), M. Napolitano, Alberic O'Kelly de Galway, Cecil J.S. Purdy (Australia), H. Rittner, Wolfram Schoen (Canada), Duncan Suttles (Canada), Alexander Ugge (Canada) and V. Zagorovsky.