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Charles Maurian
Maurian 
 

Number of games in database: 97
Years covered: 1854 to 1892
Overall record: +48 -42 =7 (53.1%)*
   * Overall winning percentage = (wins+draws/2) / total games.

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000 Chess variants (75 games)
C52 Evans Gambit (5 games)
C00 French Defense (3 games)
C70 Ruy Lopez (3 games)
C51 Evans Gambit (2 games)
C50 Giuoco Piano (2 games)
C41 Philidor Defense (2 games)


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CHARLES MAURIAN
(born May-21-1838, died Dec-02-1912, 74 years old) United States of America

[what is this?]

Charles Amedée Maurian, born New Orleans, LA USA; died Paris FRA.

He was the closest and life-long friend of Paul Morphy. In October 1862, in the midst of the Civil War, he accompanied Morphy to Cuba on a Spanish steamboat, with the ultimate destination of Paris in 1863. All together, there are 75 known games between Maurian and Paul Morphy.

Obituaries

"News of the death in Paris, France, of Charles Amedée Maurian, formerly of this city, and famous in Europe and in this country as a chess student of vast erudition, will be received with regret by his friends in New Orleans, and especially by the members of the Chess, Checkers and Whist Club, of which he was one of the founders, the first vice president afters its organization, and, at the time of his death an honorary life member." (1)

"In the death of Charles A. Maurian, at Paris, France, on Monday last, the whole chess world has suffered a very great loss, but the chess fraternity of this city will feel the blow most deeply, for here the loss is of a rarely personal character owing to Mr. Maurian's great coterie of New Orleans friends. Seldom has a local player been so lauded for his chessic prowess, and never has one been more genuinely and unanimously admired for his personal character; indeed it does not seem too much to say that, in the passing of Mr. Maurian, the Chess, Checkers and Whist Club has lost one of its most revered members, and the Crescent City, one of its noblest sons.

Charles Amedee Maurian was born in New Orleans, May 21, 1838, of distinguished French ancestry. His after was Charles A. Maurian, for many years judge of the parish and City Civil Court, while his mother, Miss Lasthénie Peychaud, came from one of the most aristocratic San Domingo families. Among the early recollections of Mr. Maurian's is his remembrance of seeing Paul Morphy, then only twelve years old, just eleven months the elder of the young Charles, playing chess with the latter's grand-parents, and, so darkly sometimes is the future veiled, that the little Charles wondered how any boy could be interested in a game so quiet and unamusing! Some few years later, this child friendship was cemented into a life-long esteem, for in 1853, the two lads were at school together, at Spring Hill College, Mobile, Ala., and, while Charles was temporarily a shut-in in the college infirmary, Paul taught him the rudiments of the royal game. The pupil made wonderful progress and, at first receiving the odds of Queen from his genius-tutor, he soon grew strong enough to have the odds of a Knight only—and on these terms he and Paul Morphy played to the very end.

Apropos of this last, Mr. Maurian was wont to relate, modestly, of course, as was always his way, but humorously, too, how at the Paris congress of 1867, the late Herr Rosenthal, then the French champion and one of the leading masters in the grand tourney, had announced that inasmuch Morphy had given the New Orleanian the odds of Knight, he (Rosenthal) could yield him the half-Knight, i.e., the games being alternately at Knight-odds and on even terms. Imagine the surprised chagrin of the confident Frenchman when the resulting match of fourteen games was won by Mr. Maurian, who had scored all the Knight-odds parties and the majority of the even-term ones!

Five years after his introduction to the game, Mr. Maurian entered his first tournament, at the New Orleans Chess Club, and, although barely in his twentieth year, he won the highest honors. Subsequently, he took part in various local contests, invariably achieving eminent positions, but he was never known to engage in a public tournament outside his native city. For upwards of thirty years, he was recognized as an active amateur of the very high class and standing and during this period he met many famous masters on even terms, always making an excellent showing even against such chess Titans as Capt. Mackenzie, Tchigorin, Zukertort and Steinitz. During the past twenty years or so, however, Mr. Maurian had retired from active play, but he still maintained his interest in all things pertaining to his favorite game, being accounted always one of the most profound and erudite students of chess, and, although, unfortunately, he has written no books, his contributions to chess literature, in the way of essays and annotations, have been both numerous and valuable.

Being thus such a deep student of Caissa, it is natural that Mr. Maurian should have turned to chess editorship, and his first column appeared in the New Orleans Delta, March 14, 1858, and lasted until Nov. 25, 1860, being the first regular chess department ever established in the Crescent City. In February, 1883, he became co-editor and one of the originators of the chess department of The Times-Democrat and for many years contributed regularly to this column. He was, also, among the founders of the New Orleans Chess, Checkers and Whist Club, having been elected to the first presidency of this association, and, at the time of his death, he still remained an honorary member of the club.

Feb. 26, 1862, Mr. Maurian was married to Miss Marie Meffre-Rouzan, and thus only about ten months ago, the long happy couple celebrated their golden wedding with half a century of beautiful comradeship to look back upon. Since 1890, Mr. and Mrs. Maurian resided in Paris, returning every few years, however, of a pleasant winter among their many close friends in New Orleans." (2)

Sources
(1) New Orleans Times-Democrat, 1912.12.03, p2
(2) New Orleans Times-Democrat, 1912.12.08, Part Second, p8

Last updated: 2025-04-18 12:18:42

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 page 1 of 4; games 1-25 of 97  PGN Download
Game  ResultMoves YearEvent/LocaleOpening
1. Maurian vs Morphy 0-1191854Odds game (Ra8,Pf7)000 Chess variants
2. Morphy vs Maurian 0-1271854Odds game (Ra1,Nb1)000 Chess variants
3. Morphy vs Maurian ½-½461854Odds game (Ra1,Nb1)000 Chess variants
4. Morphy vs Maurian 1-0251854Odds game (Ra1,Nb1)000 Chess variants
5. Maurian vs Morphy 1-0321854Odds game (Ra8,Pf7+1)000 Chess variants
6. Maurian vs Morphy 0-1161854Odds game (Ra8,Pf7+1)000 Chess variants
7. Maurian vs Morphy 1-0291854Odds game (Ra8,Pf7+1)000 Chess variants
8. Maurian vs Morphy 0-1291854Odds game (Ra8,Pf7)000 Chess variants
9. Maurian vs Morphy 1-0271854Odds game (Ra8,Pf7)000 Chess variants
10. Morphy vs Maurian 1-0161854Odds game (Ra1,Nb1)000 Chess variants
11. Morphy vs Maurian 0-1391854Odds game (Ra1,Nb1)000 Chess variants
12. Morphy vs Maurian 0-1261854Odds game (Qd1)000 Chess variants
13. Morphy vs Maurian 0-1421855Odds game (Ra1)000 Chess variants
14. Maurian vs Morphy 1-0521856Odds game (Nb8)000 Chess variants
15. Morphy vs Maurian 1-0151857Odds game (Nb1)000 Chess variants
16. Maurian vs Morphy 0-1281857Odds Game (Nb8)000 Chess variants
17. Morphy vs Maurian 0-1471858Odds Game (Nb1)000 Chess variants
18. Morphy vs Maurian 1-0261858Odds Game (Ra1)000 Chess variants
19. Morphy vs Maurian 1-0261858Odds Game (Ra1)000 Chess variants
20. Morphy vs Maurian 0-1541858Odds Game (Nb1)000 Chess variants
21. Morphy vs Maurian 0-1121858Odds Game (Ra1)000 Chess variants
22. W Montgomery vs Maurian 0-1261858Casual gameC33 King's Gambit Accepted
23. Morphy vs Maurian 0-1361858Odds Game (Ra1)000 Chess variants
24. I Hart vs Maurian  1-05018581st Annual New Orleans CC TournamentC41 Philidor Defense
25. W Gasquet vs Maurian  0-14218581st Annual New Orleans CC TournamentC41 Philidor Defense
 page 1 of 4; games 1-25 of 97  PGN Download
  REFINE SEARCH:   White wins (1-0) | Black wins (0-1) | Draws (1/2-1/2) | Maurian wins | Maurian loses  

Kibitzer's Corner
< Earlier Kibitzing  · PAGE 2 OF 3 ·  Later Kibitzing>
Feb-05-12
Premium Chessgames Member
  alexmagnus: <Could YOU beat Morphy if he was down a knight?>

Not as big deal as some think. Recently they did an experiment, letting players rated 1600-1900 (one 1600, one 1700 one 1800 and one 1900) play two games against a GM with piece odds (rapid games, with Gustafsson as GM) - the 1600 and 1700 drew, the 1800 lost and the 1900 won.

Feb-05-12
Premium Chessgames Member
  JointheArmy: lol @ recently did experiments.

ICC host odds games every other week and mid tier GM's routinely crush players (1800-2000 USCF) with knight odds.

Feb-05-12
Premium Chessgames Member
  alexmagnus: <ICC host odds games every other week and mid tier GM's routinely crush players (1800-2000 USCF) with knight odds.>

At which time control?

From the experiment I mentioned, I can show the games.

Feb-05-12  Blunderdome: <I have read that Tigran Petrosian gave knight odds to an IM.>

And won? I mean, I could give Carlsen a knight. I'd just lose quicker.

Feb-05-12
Premium Chessgames Member
  alexmagnus: In blitz, to with with Knight odds you don't need a big rating difference. Heck, even Queen odds is playabnle at 2000 vs 1500 level in Blitz. But in rapids and tournament games already a Knight is too much to handle, for a GM vs an amateur.
Feb-05-12
Premium Chessgames Member
  alexmagnus: <to with with Knight odds>

To <win> with Knight odds was meant of course.

Feb-11-12  Lambda: I can beat Fruit at knight odds. But playing a GM would probably be different; they'd understand the situation and complicate matters, while the computer will happily exchange down to an endgame if it can gain a few centipawns doing so.

<Wow.. I didn't know there are CG members who can beat Morphy.>

CG has some strong GMs amongst its membership. It's not just amateurs here.

May-10-13  Abdel Irada: <Keypusher: I wonder what the effect of time odds would be.>

Problematical. It depends on many factors. Chief among them: How comfortable are the respective players with time pressure and the psychological pressures of accepting odds?

Kasparov is quite strong in blitz, so I would expect him to have little trouble offering odds to virtually anyone, but this does not apply equally to all the strongest GMs.

For the other player, meanwhile, things are not so easy either. In San Francisco in 1999, I watched a solid 2200 player taking the odds, first, of five minutes to one, and later, of one minute to ten seconds, in a long series of games played over the course of several months. The odds-giver was a Filipino 2500 named Omar, and he won every game.

The odds-taker's quandary: how to manage his time advantage. If he moves slowly so as to make the best use of it, his opponent can think on his time. If he tries to stop this by moving fast, his advantage becomes meaningless.

(On the other hand, not everyone can match Omar's feat of completing ten moves in one second. That intimidated *me*, and I wasn't across the board from him.)

May-21-16  TheFocus: Happy birthday, Morphy's Mate.
Jul-30-16  Atking: A friend of mine live in Paris I would know in which cemetery is Maurian' tomb. Does someone know?
May-29-17
Premium Chessgames Member
  Joshka: Are their any chess experts who could possibly give a tournament rating for this guy? How strong was he? He lived quite a long time after Paul died. Did he ever write details on Morphys life which he kept silent while Paul was alive? Thanks in advance!!
May-29-17  Paarhufer: http://www.edochess.ca/players/p537...
May-29-17  morfishine: <Joshka> Chessmetrics http://www.chessmetrics.com/cm/ has a section devoted to calculating ratings for players who played before ratings came about. I think Morphy came in around 2700, Anderssen 2550, Alekhine maybe 2670 or thereabouts

*****

Jan-22-18
Premium Chessgames Member
  Sally Simpson: Charles Maurian was one of those who carried Morphy's coffin.

"At 5 o’clock the coffin was carried down by Edward Morphy, Edmond Morphy, Leonce Percy, Henry Percy, Edgar Hincks and Charles Maurian, his life long companion and former adversary over the chess board."

https://www.chessmarginalia.com/the...

Jan-22-18  john barleycorn: <Sally Simpson: Charles Maurian was one of those who carried Morphy's coffin. ...>

Good to know

Mar-20-18  JPi: Would anyone know if Charles Maurian had a child?
Mar-20-18
Premium Chessgames Member
  HeMateMe: Check the Maurian Chronicles?
Mar-20-18
Premium Chessgames Member
  moronovich: He is certainly one of the candidates.
Mar-25-18  Calli: <JPi: Would anyone know if Charles Maurian had a child?> Can't be totally sure, but it appears not. Maurian's obituary says he married in 1862, but it doesn't mention any children.
Jun-14-18  sorrowstealer: Joshka: Are their any chess experts who could possibly give a tournament rating for this guy? 1500?cause that's exactly my strength.
Jun-15-18  JPi: Thanks <Calli>!
Jul-04-18
Premium Chessgames Member
  Joshka: After moving to Europe in 1890, was he still employed as a chess column writer? Did he ever write about Paul during his last 22 years??
Jul-04-18
Premium Chessgames Member
  Joshka: <Calli> alright married in 1862!! His wife?? Amazing how scarce any info is about this guy, and of course his friend Paul as well. The last 20 years of Paul's life and the last 22 years of Maurians life are just a non-excistant blur??
Aug-06-19
Premium Chessgames Member
  jinkinson: Wikipedia page: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Charl...
Nov-23-19  SBC: .

<Joshka>
Charles de Maurian married Marie Meffre-Rouzan on Feb. 26, 1862. Marie was born into a wealthy, influential family on Oct. 6, 1841. Charles and Marie moved to Paris in 1890. Charles dies in 1912. His wife was still living at the time, but I have no idea about her past this point.

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