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Johannes Zukertort
Zukertort 
 

Number of games in database: 673
Years covered: 1862 to 1888
Overall record: +289 -141 =100 (64.0%)*
   * Overall winning percentage = (wins+draws/2) / total games in the database. 143 exhibition games, blitz/rapid, odds games, etc. are excluded from this statistic.

MOST PLAYED OPENINGS
With the White pieces:
 Evans Gambit (70) 
    C51 C52
 Vienna Opening (49) 
    C25 C28 C29 C27
 French Defense (38) 
    C01 C11 C14 C00 C10
 Ruy Lopez (37) 
    C77 C65 C67 C64 C70
 Queen's Pawn Game (28) 
    D05 D02 D00 A46 D04
 Sicilian (22) 
    B46 B45 B40 B43 B23
With the Black pieces:
 Ruy Lopez (92) 
    C65 C77 C67 C80 C84
 King's Gambit Accepted (36) 
    C33 C39 C37
 Evans Gambit (33) 
    C52 C51
 Giuoco Piano (23) 
    C50 C53 C54
 Scotch Game (21) 
    C45
 Ruy Lopez, Open (15) 
    C80 C83
Repertoire Explorer

NOTABLE GAMES: [what is this?]
   Zukertort vs Blackburne, 1883 1-0
   Zukertort vs Anderssen, 1865 1-0
   Zukertort vs NN, 1877 1-0
   Zukertort vs Count Epoureano, 1872 1-0
   Zukertort vs Blackburne, 1883 1-0
   Zukertort vs Englisch, 1883 1-0
   Chigorin vs Zukertort, 1883 0-1
   Zukertort vs Anderssen, 1865 1-0
   Steinitz vs Zukertort, 1886 0-1
   NN vs Zukertort, 1862 0-1

WORLD CHAMPIONSHIPS: [what is this?]
   Steinitz - Zukertort World Championship Match (1886)

NOTABLE TOURNAMENTS: [what is this?]
   Zukertort - Anderssen Thematic Match (1871)
   Potter - Zukertort (1875)
   London (1883)
   Paris (1878)
   Rosenthal - Zukertort (1880)
   Blackburne - Zukertort (1881)
   BCA Grand International, London (1872)
   2nd DSB Congress, Berlin (1881)
   Simpson's Divan, London (1876)
   8th WSB Congress, Barmen (1869)
   Leipzig (1877)
   2nd BCA Congress, London (1886)
   3rd BCA Congress, London (1887)
   Vienna (1882)
   5th DSB Congress, Frankfurt (1887)

GAME COLLECTIONS: [what is this?]
   0ZeR0's collected games volume 52 by 0ZeR0
   0ZeR0's collected games volume 53 by 0ZeR0
   Challenger Zukertort by Gottschalk
   The t_t Players: Staunton, Steinitz & Zukertort by fredthebear
   London 1883 by JoseTigranTalFischer
   London 1883 by suenteus po 147
   Vienna 1882 by suenteus po 147
   Paris 1878 by suenteus po 147


Search Sacrifice Explorer for Johannes Zukertort
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JOHANNES ZUKERTORT
(born Sep-07-1842, died Jun-20-1888, 45 years old) Poland (federation/nationality United Kingdom)

[what is this?]

Johannes Hermann Zukertort was born in Lublin, Congress Poland(1).

Background

Zukertort's father was a Christian Protestant missionary of Jewish origin at a time when the Christian mission among the Jews in Russian-occupied Poland was illegal. Consequently, the Zukertorts emigrated to Prussia. In 1861, Johannes enrolled at the University of Breslau to study medicine, although it is unclear if he completed his degree. It was in Breslau he met Adolf Anderssen and started playing chess, moving to Berlin several years later in 1867. After again moving, this time to London, he became a naturalised citizen of the United Kingdom in 1878.

Matches

Non-title: In 1868, he played and lost a match to Anderssen in Berlin by 3.5-8.5 (+3 -8 =1). In 1871, he turned the tables, defeating Anderssen in a match by 5-2 (+5 -2). In 1872, he moved to London where he played Wilhelm Steinitz, losing 9-3 (+1 -7 =4). In May - June 1880, he had defeated Samuel Rosenthal, the French champion, Rosenthal - Zukertort (1880). In 1881, he played and defeated Joseph Henry Blackburne by 8.5-4.5 (+6 -2 =5). After losing the World Championship match against Steinitz in 1886, he lost a second match he played against Blackburne in 1887 by 5-9 (+1 -5 =8), Blackburne - Zukertort (1887) , probably because of declining health (he died the following year).

Title: The Steinitz - Zukertort World Championship Match (1886) lasted from 11 January to 29 March 1886. After leading by 4-1 after 5 games, Zukertort won only one more game, the thirteenth, going on to lose the match by 7½-12½ (+5 -10 =5).

Tournaments

Zukertort placed 3rd in London in 1872 behind Steinitz and Blackburne; 2nd behind Blackburne in London in 1876; 1st in Cologne and 2nd in Leipzig in 1877 behind Louis Paulsen equal 1st with Simon Winawer at the Paris International Chess Congress in 1878, beating Winawer in the play-off; 2nd at Berlin in 1881 behind Blackburne; =4th in Vienna in 1882 behind Steinitz, Winawer and James Mason and 1st in London in 1883, 3 points ahead of Steinitz. Zukertort's win in London in 1883 was considered to be his most significant success. The tournament was a double round robin contest with 14 players and therefore ran for 26 rounds; it also featured the first time the double-sided chess clock was used in competition. He won his games against most of the world's leading players including Steinitz, Blackburne, Winawer, Mikhail Chigorin, George Henry Mackenzie, Berthold Englisch, Samuel Rosenthal, and Henry Bird, scoring 22/26 (after starting with 22/23), and finishing 3 points ahead of Steinitz, who was 2nd with 19/26. This tournament led to the World Chess Championship match between these Zukertort and Steinitz three years later.

After his defeat in the World Championship match in 1886, Zukertort's health declined, and he was diagnosed with rheumatism, coronary heart disease, kidney problems, and arteriosclerosis. His tournament results declined steeply, placing 7th in London and 3rd in Nottingham in 1886; 14th equal in Frankfurt (1887) and 4th in London in 1887, and 7th in London in 1888. Zukertort competed in, and finished, the Simpson's Divan handicap tournament held March-May 1888 scoring 10½ points. He died during the British Chess Club handicap tournament which had begun on June 5, 1888, his score at the time of his death was +7=0-1 and he had yet to play Bird, Blackburne, Gattie, Ingoldsby, Pollock, and Sellon.

Final days

The Chess Monthly, v9 n11, July 1888, p322, published the following account of Zukertort's final days, which used much of what was written in the London Field, 1888.06.23, p905, with some modification:

<On Monday, the 18th inst, he played one of the handicap games at the British Chess Club. On Tuesday he seemed in better health and spirits than usual of late. He passed the afternoon at the British Chess Club, either conversing freely or looking at positions on the several boards. He left a few minutes after seven o'clock, appeared at Simpson's about two hours later, and whilst playing a game of Chess with Mr. Sylvain Meyer was seized with an attack of faintness, which seemed to be of a serious nature. As usual in cases of emergency, everybody being eager to help, none hit upon the right means. Instead of calling medical aid, he was taken to the British Chess Club in an unconscious state. There a doctor was soon in attendance, but the anxiety of the numerous friends present increased with the prolonged comatose state of the patient, and Dr. Cassidy, a member of the club, was sent for, when it was thought advisable to remove the patient to Charing Cross Hospital. At about four o'clock a.m. the Rev. J. Verschoyle, and Messrs. Frank Harris, Gunsberg, and Hoffer made inquiries there, and it was ascertained from Dr. Jeeves that he was still in a state of unconsciousness, and that the symptoms of a cerebral attack (Dr. Cassidy's diagnosis) had increased. He never regained consciousness, but expired about ten o'clock on Wednesday morning, the cause of death being cerebral hemorrhage. When friends called at the hospital in the forenoon he was no more.>

<...Dr. Frank Jeeves, the house physician of Charing-Cross Hospital ...had since made a post-mortem examination, and found that death was due to cerebral haemorrhage. The kidneys of the deceased were slightly unhealthy ...and the arteries and the base of the brain were diseased...>(4)

Chess legacy and epilogue

Zukertort was one of the ablest attacking players of his generation, ranked by Chessmetrics as the number 1 player for 56 months between 1878 and 1886.(2) Yet, unlike the majority of attacking players, Zukertort preferred openings such as 1. c4 and 1. Nf3 that were closed or semi-closed and offered the possibility of transpositions. In the early 1880s 1. Nf3 was known as "Zukertort's Opening", 40 years before it became known as the Réti Opening. His name is also associated with the Colle-Zukertort Opening: <1.d4 Nf6 2.Nf3 d5 3.e3 e6 4.Bd3 c5 5.b3 Nc6 6.O-O Bd6 7.Bb2 O-O>, which is frequently reached by transposition. In 1879, Zukertort was co-editor, with Leopold Hoffer, of The Chess Monthly. He also demonstrated his ability to play blindfold simuls when in 1876, he played sixteen games simultaneously while blindfolded, winning by 13-3 (+11=4-1).

He was buried in Brompton Cemetery in London. In recent times his grave had fallen into disrepair and in 2012 it was restored and rededicated after British Grandmaster Stuart C Conquest organized a chess appeal that attracted the necessary funds from the Polish Government and the chess community.(3)

Sources
(1) Congress Poland was essentially a Russian possession of part of 19th century Poland which was subsequently returned to Poland at the end of World War I: Wikipedia article: Congress Poland;
(2) Chessmetrics: http://chessmetrics.com/cm/CM2/Play...;
(3) Johannes Zukertort's grave rededicated in London: http://www.chessvibes.com/reports/j...;
(4) Manchester Courier and Lancashire General Advertiser, 25 June 1888, p.8

Last updated: 2023-02-06 20:14:45

Try our new games table.

 page 1 of 27; games 1-25 of 673  PGN Download
Game  ResultMoves YearEvent/LocaleOpening
1. NN vs Zukertort 0-1101862Casual gameC42 Petrov Defense
2. Zukertort vs NN 1-0241862PosenC37 King's Gambit Accepted
3. Zukertort vs S Oppler 1-0301862Zukertort Blindfold GameC51 Evans Gambit
4. G Neumann vs Zukertort 0-1361864Casual gameB45 Sicilian, Taimanov
5. G Neumann vs Zukertort 1-0181864Casual gameC51 Evans Gambit
6. Zukertort vs Anderssen 0-1391864BreslauC66 Ruy Lopez
7. Zukertort vs Anderssen 1-0331864BreslauC64 Ruy Lopez, Classical
8. L Waldstein vs Zukertort 0-1211864Zukertort Blindfold Simul 2b, PosenC39 King's Gambit Accepted
9. Zukertort vs Lowinsohn 1-0291864Zukertort Blindfold Simul 2b, PosenC50 Giuoco Piano
10. Zukertort vs F Lehmann / L Waldstein 1-0331864PosenB12 Caro-Kann Defense
11. F Lehmann vs Zukertort 0-1151864Casual gameC44 King's Pawn Game
12. Zukertort vs Anderssen 1-0271864BreslauC64 Ruy Lopez, Classical
13. Zukertort vs Anderssen 1-0341864BreslauC65 Ruy Lopez, Berlin Defense
14. Zukertort vs Anderssen 0-1271864BreslauC65 Ruy Lopez, Berlin Defense
15. Zukertort vs Anderssen 0-1221864BreslauC64 Ruy Lopez, Classical
16. Zukertort vs Anderssen 0-1511864BreslauC52 Evans Gambit
17. Anderssen vs Zukertort 0-1311865BreslauC37 King's Gambit Accepted
18. Zukertort vs Anderssen 1-0171865BreslauC37 King's Gambit Accepted
19. Anderssen vs Zukertort 1-0241865BreslauC37 King's Gambit Accepted
20. Zukertort vs Anderssen 1-0251865BreslauC37 King's Gambit Accepted
21. Zukertort vs Anderssen 0-1171865BreslauC37 King's Gambit Accepted
22. Zukertort vs Anderssen 0-1301865BreslauC65 Ruy Lopez, Berlin Defense
23. Zukertort vs Anderssen 1-0201865BreslauC37 King's Gambit Accepted
24. E von Schmidt vs Zukertort 0-1421865BreslauC33 King's Gambit Accepted
25. W Kornfeld vs Zukertort 0-1141865PosenC33 King's Gambit Accepted
 page 1 of 27; games 1-25 of 673  PGN Download
  REFINE SEARCH:   White wins (1-0) | Black wins (0-1) | Draws (1/2-1/2) | Zukertort wins | Zukertort loses  

Kibitzer's Corner
< Earlier Kibitzing  · PAGE 9 OF 12 ·  Later Kibitzing>
Dec-29-13  thomastonk: <tjipa,Karpova> There is a biography by Domanski and Lissowski. The German edition is called "Der Großmeister aus Lublin", Berlin 2005. They report on troublesome research in archives that yield an indisputable proof that Z. was born in Lublin as Jan Herman Cukiertort.
Dec-29-13
Premium Chessgames Member
  offramp: I have just seen a photo of his restored gravestone at http://www.chessvibes.pl/sites/defa.... I am very disappointed.
The headstone reads, "<POLISH CHESS GRANDMASTER JOHANNES HERMANN ZUKERTORT
7. 09. 1842 LUBLIN, POLAND
+ 20. 06. 1888 LONDON
ONE OF THE WORLD'S NOTABLE CHESS PLAYERS
WORLD CHAMPION CONTENDER 1886
THE GREATEST POLISH GRANDMASTER
OF THE XIX CENTURY
ALWAYS IN OUR MEMORY>
"

There is a similar inscription underneath that in Polish.

The English version is not very good. The old inscription was much simpler: <In Memory of J.H. Zukertort, the Chess Master, Born September 7th, 1842. Died June 20th, 1888> That is certainly the form that the dates should have taken, not some decimal/SI-unit-style of dates.

Also what is the point of telling the reader that Zukertort was <ONE OF THE WORLD'S NOTABLE CHESS PLAYERS> and then informing us that he was, <WORLD CHAMPION CONTENDER 1886>?

Here is how it should have read:
"<IN MEMORIAM
JOHANNES HERMANN ZUKERTORT
POLISH CHESS MASTER
Born September 7th, 1842, Lublin.
Died June 20th, 1888, London.
REST IN PEACE>
"

Dec-30-13
Premium Chessgames Member
  offramp: It really is a terrible headstone. Very little thought has gone into it. They could not quite decide how to describe Zukertort so they thought they'd try a few things:

<POLISH CHESS GRANDMASTER> is attempt number one. But it seems someone thought either that Grandmaster was an anachronism or that it was not praise enough. So attempt number 2 was made: <ONE OF THE WORLD'S NOTABLE CHESS PLAYERS> But some malcontent said, "Shouldn't we say <why> he is notable? 'Notable' is a bit vague." After a bit of thought someone comes up with the vague: <WORLD CHAMPION CONTENDER 1886> Contender LOL! Isn't that what they call the participants on TV hit Gladiator? It doesn't say how many contenders there were (there were two).

Better would have been:
"HE PLAYED STEINITZ IN THE FIRST WORLD CHESS CHAMPIONSHIP".

Now someone realised that the Polish nation - who paid for this mess - have not been mentioned enough. So one last descriptive attempt is made: <THE GREATEST POLISH GRANDMASTER OF THE XIX CENTURY>
That is waffle. It is a longueur as the French would say. Never mind that Zukertort was never a Grandmaster, and would not have needed the title even if it was around, just as one never says Grandmaster Fischer or Grandmaster Kortschnoi. And that annoying mish-mash <XIX CENTURY>. Why the Roman numerals? <19TH CENTURY> would be simple and correct, but the whole phrase is redundant.

So my own attempt, based on the original, would be far better. But if one wanted extra verbiage it could read in full:

<IN MEMORIAM
JOHANNES HERMANN ZUKERTORT
POLISH CHESS MASTER
HE PLAYED STEINITZ IN THE FIRST WORLD CHAMPIONSHIP MATCH IN 1886 Born September 7th, 1842, Lublin.
Died June 20th, 1888, London.
REST IN PEACE>

But whether or not that <is> any good, at least I put 10 minutes thought into it and didn't just scribble down the first things that popped into my head.

Dec-30-13
Premium Chessgames Member
  tamar: <offramp> lol, very funny. FIrst time I saw a headstone annotated!

Simpler would have been better, but it is hard to blame the Polish Heritage Society, who probably had a hard time convincing people to support such a project, and not much knowledge of chess.

Had they left out the redundancies, they could have included the Polish version of his original name "Jan Herman Cukiertort", if that is a correct claim of the Polish biography. http://www.chesscafe.com/text/revie...

Dec-30-13
Premium Chessgames Member
  offramp: < tamar: <offramp> lol, very funny. FIrst time I saw a headstone annotated...>

LOL, <Tamar>! Of course I'm not being totally serious! I'm going to go there soon, Brompton Cemetery, to smoke a Camberwell Carrot while prostate on JZ's slab.

Dec-30-13
Premium Chessgames Member
  tamar: I hope you can go. The Camberwell Carrot would be a nice touch.

Zukertort took digitalis for a heart condition, but I don't know if he smoked it.

Its originator as a therapeutic drug ,William Withering, described it as a "beautiful green powder" that he made from the leaves. He also made it into a tea.

Dec-30-13  RedShield: < I'm going to go there soon, Brompton Cemetery>

If you're relying on public transport, the 345 bus over Battersea Bridge is your best bet. It'll also give you a chance to see how the other half live:

http://www.bathchronicle.co.uk/expe...

Dec-31-13
Premium Chessgames Member
  offramp: I think I'll take the 14 from Fulham Broadway station.
Dec-31-13  RedShield: Tell a lie, you need the 319.
Dec-31-13
Premium Chessgames Member
  offramp: I'll take the K12, the R1, the 512 to Waterloo. Then the Dial-A-Ride to St George's. The G1 to Clapham South. The N12 to Clapham Junction then the next day the Overground to West Bromptom.

Then the 319.

Should be about a day and a bit.

Apr-05-14  morfishine: <offramp> Zuke's head stone isn't all that horrible. Actualy, its sort of funny how an entire obit was chiseled in two languages
Apr-24-14
Premium Chessgames Member
  Check It Out: Camberwell Carrot (?) - Is that a British Blunt?
Apr-25-14  RedShield: <offramp>, did you make it? I'm hoping to pop in there next week, so can you tell me to which part of the cemetery I should be heading?
Apr-27-14  RedShield: It took me half an hour, but, yesterday, I managed to find Zukertort's grave. Despite the <ALWAYS IN OUR MEMORY>, I doubt anyone has tended it since the rededication ceremony in 2012, as the surrounding undergrowth is encroaching again.

http://www.polishheritage.co.uk/ima...

From the South Lodge entrance (Fulham Road), the grave is located on the far left side (in the shadow of Stamford Bridge) about a third of the way along.

May-09-14  ljfyffe: Zukertort played blindfold exhibition in Quebec City, Canada, in February of 1884. By the way, there is evidence of a club there in 1842 that met at Payne's Hotel (Quebec Mercury,, Nov 30, 1841;Feb 17,1842). Thereabouts, there is a letter to the editor that spoofs the players' names and their chess-playing abilities. Jonathan Melt presented a chess problem for them to solve. See: Des debuts modestes a Quebec par Larry Fyffe, AU NOM DU ROI, p. 56.
May-09-14  ljfyffe: See: Zukertort in Canada, WRITINGS IN CHESS HISTORY, Hilbert, 2012, pp.23-57.
May-11-14  ljfyffe: Another : Pollock-Charles Stubbs(chess editor of
Saint John Globe). July, 1895, Saint John, NB. Might be in forthcoming book on Pollock? 1e4 e5 2Nf3 Nc6 3Bc4 Bc5 4b4 Bb6 5b5 Na5 6Nxe5 Nxc4 7Nxc4 Bxf2+ 8Kxf2 Qf6+ 9Qf3 Qxa1 10Nc3 Nf6 11Re1 o-o 12e5 Ng4+ 13Qxg4 d5 14Qg3 dxc4 15Ba3 Qxe1+ 16Kxe1 Re8 17Nd5 Re6 18Nf6+ Kh8 19Bf8 g6 20Qg5 1 - 0
May-25-14
Premium Chessgames Member
  ketchuplover: Johannes Zukertort:Artist of the Chessboard is now available via chesscafe.com and probably other venues too. Shop around for the best deal. Best wishes.
Jun-07-14  ljfyffe: Zukertort played John DeSoyres before the latter moved to Saint John, NB.
Jun-10-14  ljfyffe: John Barry, of Montreal, played against Zukertort in the 1884 exhibition tour when Zukertort was in Montreal, playing against 12 while "blindfolded".
Aug-05-14  ljfyffe: When in Leadville, Colorado in 1884, Zukertort played General H.B. Johnson. The game appears in the St. John Globe of that year. Landsberger mentions their meeting, in The Steinitz Papers.
Sep-07-14
Premium Chessgames Member
  Penguincw: R.I.P. World Chess Championship Challenger, Johannes Zukertort.
Sep-07-14  Eduardo Bermudez: Best World Rank: #1 (56 different months between the August 1878 rating list and the February 1886 rating list ) Most months like # 1 than anyone in chess history !
Sep-07-14  ljfyffe: Zukertort - William Boultbee Toronto 1884 blindfold exhibition < 1e4 e5 2f4 Bc5 3Nf3 d6 4Nc3 Nf6 5Bc4 Be6 6Bxe6 fxe6 7fxe5 dxe5 8Qe2 Ng4 9h3 Nf6 10Nxe5 0-0 11Qc4 Bf2+ 12Kxf2 Ng4+ 13Kg3 Qf6 14Nxg4 Qf4+ 15Kh4 Rf6 16Kh5 Kh8 0-1.>
Sep-07-14  Eduardo Bermudez: For somebody that never got the world chess championship
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