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Berolina pawn

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Fairy chess pawn
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8b7 black circlec7 black crossd7 black circlec6 white upside-down pawnd4 black circlee4 black upside-down pawnh4 black circlee3 black circlef3 black crossg3 black circlef2 white upside-down pawn8
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The diagram shows white Berolina pawn move options (black dots) and capture squares ("×"). If the white f2-pawn advances to d4 in a single move, Black's e4-pawn can capture it en passant on e3.

The Berolina pawn (also known as Berlin pawn, anti-pawn, or simply Berolina) is a popular fairy chess piece based on the pawn. It may move one vacant square diagonally forward, it may move two vacant squares forward along a diagonal on its first move, and it may capture one square vertically forward. It was invented by Edmund Nebermann in 1926, who named it after the city of Berlin in which he worked. The Berolina pawn is featured in several chess variants, including Berolina chess, and these variants have been played in tournaments. Additionally, the Berolina pawn has found frequent use in chess problems.

In this article, the Berolina pawn is represented by an inverted pawn.

This article uses algebraic notation to describe chess moves.

Description

The Berolina pawn moves, without capturing, one square diagonally forward. It captures one square straight forward. (Thus, it is the converse of a standard chess pawn, which moves straight forward and captures diagonally forward.)

The Berolina has the option to move two squares diagonally forward on its first move. It can also capture en passant: a Berolina pawn, attacking a square that has just been bypassed by an enemy pawn's two-square advance, may capture the enemy pawn as if it had moved only one square. Like the orthodox pawn, the Berolina pawn is promoted when it reaches its last rank.

Example problem

Dr. C. C. Lytton (original)
abcdefgh
8e7 black knightf7 white queenb5 black upside-down pawnd5 black rooka4 white kingd3 white knighta2 black kingd2 white upside-down pawnh1 white rook8
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White mates in 2

Solution: 1.Qf2 ...

  • 1...Rd4+ 2.b4#
  • 1...Rxd3 2.dxd3#
  • 1...Rc5 2.c3#
  • 1...Re5 2.e3#
  • 1...Rf5 2.f4#

Berolina chess

abcdefgh
8a8 black rookb8 black knightc8 black bishopd8 black queene8 black kingf8 black bishopg8 black knighth8 black rooka7 black upside-down pawnb7 black upside-down pawnc7 black upside-down pawnd7 black upside-down pawne7 black upside-down pawnf7 black upside-down pawng7 black upside-down pawnh7 black upside-down pawna2 white upside-down pawnb2 white upside-down pawnc2 white upside-down pawnd2 white upside-down pawne2 white upside-down pawnf2 white upside-down pawng2 white upside-down pawnh2 white upside-down pawna1 white rookb1 white knightc1 white bishopd1 white queene1 white kingf1 white bishopg1 white knighth1 white rook8
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Berolina chess starting position.

Berolina chess, also called Berlin chess, is a chess variant employing the Berolina pawn. Berolina chess follows the same rules as standard chess, except that all the pawns are replaced by Berolina pawns. A number of tournaments have been conducted, including a correspondence event in 1957.

Strategy implications

Pritchard writes, "Pawns have greater mobility and can concentrate in the centre, a common opening strategy." Since a pawn attacks or defends only one square, their attacking ability is less, and diagonal pawn chains cannot be formed, resulting in frequent open files. Pawns are especially dangerous in the endgame since the route to promotion is easier. Draws in Berolina chess are rare.

Example game

Ralph Betza vs. Will Viveiros; NOST tournament (1977)
1.ac4 ec5 2.d5 df5 3.bd4 Nc6 4.Bb2 Nf6 5.de3 e4 6.hf4 exe3 7.exe3 Ng4 8.Qd2 Qf6 9.Ne2 Nce5 10.Bc1 h6 11.ce4 Nc4 12.Qc3 Qg5 13.g3 Nf6 14.Nd2 Nxd2 15.Bxd2 f5 16.fe5 Nh5 17.d6 c6 (diagram) 18.e5 Qg7 19.Nd4 g4 20.Bb5 gxg3 21.Nxc6 cxc6 22.Bxc6+ Ke7 23.Bxa8 Ba6 24.c7 1–0

abcdefgh
8a8 black rookc8 black bishope8 black kingf8 black bishoph8 black rooka7 black upside-down pawnc7 black upside-down pawnf7 black upside-down pawnc6 black upside-down pawnd6 white upside-down pawnh6 black upside-down pawnc5 black upside-down pawnd5 white upside-down pawnf5 black upside-down pawng5 black queenh5 black knightd4 white upside-down pawne4 white upside-down pawnc3 white queene3 white upside-down pawng3 white upside-down pawnd2 white bishope2 white knightg2 white upside-down pawna1 white rooke1 white kingf1 white bishoph1 white rook8
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Position after 17...c6

Related pawn variants

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8d6 black circlee6 black crossf6 black circled5 black crosse5 white upside-down pawnf5 black cross8
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The Berolina Plus
abcdefgh
8d6 white circlee6 white circlef6 white circlee5 white upside-down pawn8
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The sergeant can move to or capture on white dots.

Two famous pawn variants also used in problem compositions are the Berolina Plus and the sergeant.

  • The Berolina Plus can move and capture the same as the Berolina pawn; in addition, it can capture one square horizontally (see first diagram).
  • The sergeant combines the standard chess pawn and the Berolina pawn, excluding the Berolina pawn's two-square move; that is, it can move to, or capture on, any of the three squares immediately in front (see second diagram), and it can move two squares straight forward without capturing on its first move. It can be captured en passant, but it cannot capture en passant.

See also

  • Wolf chess – a chess variant employing sergeants

Notes

  1. NOST (kNights Of the Square Table), a (now defunct) correspondence game club formed in 1960 by Bob Lauzon and Jim France, enjoyed several hundred active members.

References

  1. Dickins, Anthony (1971) . A Guide to Fairy Chess. New York: Dover Publications Inc. p. 12. ISBN 0-486-22687-5.
  2. ^ Pritchard (2007), p. 59: "Tournaments have been held, combination games have been tried, and 'Berolina pawns' have long been popular with problemists. (Funkschack, August 1926)"
  3. Funkschach, 15 August 1926
  4. Hooper & Whyld (1996), p. 38
  5. ^ Pritchard (1994), p. 22
  6. ^ Pritchard (1994), p. 21
  7. Pritchard (1994), pp. 21–22
  8. Pritchard (1994), p. 210

Bibliography

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