Vadim Teplitsky
You can help expand this article with text translated from the corresponding article in Russian. (March 2020) Click [show] for important translation instructions.
|
Vadim Teplitsky | |
---|---|
Born | Vadim Izrailevich Teplitsky 18 June 1927 |
Died | 30 April 2017 | (aged 89)
Occupation | Chess historian
|
Vadim Izrailevich Teplitsky (Russian: Вадим Израилевич Теплицкий; 18 June 1927 – 30 April 2017) was a Soviet and Israeli engineer-economist, journalist and chess historian.[1] He is the author of more than 20 books, including monographs on the history of chess, as well as over 400 articles, essays, reports, poems, parodies, epigrams published in Ukrainian, Israeli, Russian and American press, as well as on the Internet. He was a Soviet Chess Master Candidate. Teplitsky co-authored the Encyclopedic Dictionary of Chess (Moscow, 1990).
In August 1941, as a child, he was evacuated with his mother, first from Kiev to Stalingrad, then, when German troops approached the city, the family fled to Soviet Central Asia.[2] His father, a chemical engineer, Israel Gershkovich Teplitsky, volunteered for the front and was killed in action in 1941.[2] Some of his family members perished during the Holocaust.
In February 1993, he repatriated to Israel and lived in the city of Bat Yam.[3]
Teplitsky was recognized as the best chess journalist of Israel in 2002 by the Israeli Athletic Association. For five years, he worked on the Israeli radio RECA as a chess observer.
His name was included in the publication of the popular newspaper The Secret under the rubric "Jewish Names".
Among his main works is a large study called Jews in the History of Chess (1997).[3]
Teplitsky described his life and his family history in the context of historical events of the 20th century in his autobiographical book The Country That Stole My Life.[3]
Bibliography
This section needs translation from Russian to English. This section is written in Russian. If it is intended for readers from the Russian language community, it should be contributed to the Russian Wikipedia. See the list of Wikipedias. Please see this article's entry on Pages needing translation into English for discussion. If the section is not rewritten in English it may be removed. If you want to assess this article, you may want to check its Google translation. However, please do not add an automated translation to the article, since these are generally of very poor quality. If you have just labeled this article as needing translation, please add {{subst:uw-notenglish|1=Vadim Teplitsky}} ~~~~ on the talk page of the author. |
- В. И. Теплицкий. Он успевал все. // 64 — Еженедельное приложение к газете «Советский Спорт», 1974, No. 11.
- В. М. Дворак, В. И. Теплицкий. Шахматы не глядя на доску / Киев : Здоровья, 1988. — 129,[3] с. : ил.; 20 см; ISBN 5-311-00139-9.
- В. И. Теплицкий. Страна, укравшая мою жизнь : документальная повесть. Тель-Авив: Interpress Center, 1995, 61 с. : илл., портр., факсим. ; 29 см.
- В. И. Теплицкий. Евреи в истории шахмат. Тель-Авив : Interpress Center 1997. 319 с. : илл., портр.
- В. И. Теплицкий. Исаак Вистанецкий. Жизнь в шахматах. Тель-Авив, 2001
- В. И. Теплицкий. Шахматы и музыка, 2001
- В. И. Теплицкий. Моя любовь, шахматы! Записки шахматного историка / Тель-Авив, 2004
- В. И. Теплицкий. Исаак Липницкий. Ришон Лецион : MeDial, 2008
- В. И. Теплицкий. Джоконда. Ришон Лецион : MeDial, 2009
- В. И. Теплицкий. Поэт с планеты «Вышеславия». Ришон Лецион : MeDial, 2010
- В. И. Теплицкий. Младший брат «64» // «64». — 1969. — No. 9. — С. 6—7.
- Эдуард Гуфельд / Вступ. статья В. Теплицкого. — М.: ФиС, 1985. — 192 с., ил.
References
- ^ chesseditor. "Неделя шахмат | Kiev Chess" (in Russian). Retrieved 12 November 2019.
- ^ a b "Шахматная одиссея Вадима Теплицкого". Популярное периодическое издание Журнал «Экоград» (in Russian). Retrieved 12 November 2019.
- ^ a b c "Юбилей товарища по оружию | Русский Базар | Russian Bazaar Newspaper in New York (Brooklyn, Queens, Staten Island, Manhattan, Bronx) and New Jersey". www.russian-bazaar.com. Retrieved 12 November 2019.