Victorian Chess
This game is one of several variants of Capablanca Chess, a family of games which extends Chess to a 10x8 board and adds the two missing compound pieces, the Archbishop (Bishop+Knight) and the Chancellor (Rook+Knight).
The starting arrangement guards all the starting pawns, maintains the most logical parts of the FIDE chess set-up in the center squares, and puts the most powerful pieces on the outside of the board. The reasoning behind this set up is to give regular chess players a chance to develop pieces as they might ordinarily, while adding the two new pieces from the Capablanca game into play. Putting the most powerful pieces on the outside seemed reasonable as they would likely be developed later.
This piece arrangement was first invented by David Paulowich in 2004 in an email conversation with Greg Strong. It was not published to the Chess Variant Pages at the time but was included in ChessV as "Capablanca Chess, Paulowich Variant". It was then invented independantly in 2007 by John Kipling Lewis who gave it the name Victorian Chess.
Setup
White:
King f1; Archbishop e1; Bishop d1, g1; Knight c1, h1; Rook b1, i1; Chancellor a1; Queen j1; Pawn a2, b2, c2, d2, e2, f2, g2, h2, i2, j2
Black:
King f8; Archbishop e8; Bishop d8, g8; Knight c8, h8; Rook b8, i8; Chancellor a8; Queen j8; Pawn a7, b7, c7, d7, e7, f7, g7, h7, i7, j7
Initial Setup:
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Pieces
The six standard piece types from Chess move the same way in Victorian Chess.
The Archbishop is a piece that can move as either a Bishop or Knight. It is a Bishop+Knight compound in the same way that the Queen is a compound of Rook and Bishop.
The Chancellor is a piece that can move as either a Rook or Knight (a Rook+Knight compound).
Rules
Almost all rules are the same as in orthodox Chess with the only exceptions noted below:
- When castling, the King moves two spaces in either direction to castle with the Rook on the b or i file, subject to all the usual restrictions.
- Upon reaching the last rank, a Pawn may promote to a Queen, Chancellor, or Archbishop, but not to any lesser piece.
Notes
Play Online: Victorian Chess can be played on this site with Game Courier. Fully automated, rule-enforcing presets for this game can be found here. You can also view games that have previously been played on Game Courier here.
Computer Play: Victorian Chess is fully supported by ChessV, a free open-source program for playing chess variants.
Interactive Diagram: You can also play against a very basic AI with this interactive diagram (click on "Play it!" under the diagram):
This 'user submitted' page is a collaboration between the posting user and the Chess Variant Pages. Registered contributors to the Chess Variant Pages have the ability to post their own works, subject to review and editing by the Chess Variant Pages Editorial Staff.
Author: John Kipling Lewis and Greg Strong. Inventor: John Kipling Lewis and David Paulowich.
Last revised by Greg Strong.
Web page created: 2007-09-29. Web page last updated: 2020-08-01