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Armed Forces Championships winners
[edit]- USSR Armed Forces (Russian: ВС СССР)
- 1950: The first post-war championship of the Armed Forces was held. It was won by the captain of the medical service Nikolai Golovko[1]
- 1955: Leonid Stein (1934–1973) won the 11th USSR Armed Forces chess championship on tiebreak over Anatoly Lutikov[2]
- 1960: Eduard Gufeld (1936–2002) in Riga[2]
- 1962: Anatoly Lein (born 1931)[2]
- November 1970: The Leiningrad team won the USSR Armed Forces championship in Kiev[2]
- 1972: Leningrad – Valerij Zhuravliov (shared with Jānis Klovāns)
- January 1975: Aivars Gipslis, Evgeny Sveshnikov, and Gennady Timoshchenko tied for 1st place in the USSR Armed Forces championship in Moscow[2]
- 1980? Yevgeniy Vladimirov (born 1957)
- 1987: Alexey Borisovich Vyzmanavin
Socalist Armed Forces Championships
[edit]- Mayh 1964: Evgeny Vasiukov in Moscow[2]
- April 1965: Vladimir Savon in Budapest[2]
- September 1966: Vlastimil Hort in Prague[2]
- July 1967: Vlastimil Hort, won the 4th Socialist Armed Forces championship in Havana[2]
Soviet Army Team Championships
[edit]- 1953: By order of Marshal of the Soviet Union Georgy Konstantinovich Zhukov, team championships of the Soviet Army began to be held.
Red Army Chess Championships (1918–1946)
[edit]- (Russian: СССР Армейский по шахматам Чемпионат)
- (Red Army = Красная Армия or КА or КА Шахматам Чемпионат or Чемпионат КА по шахматам)
- 1924: the first Red Army chess championship took place
- 1929: Leonid Ivanovich Shamaev, won the Red Army championship[3]
Soviet Army Chess Championships (1946–1993)
[edit]- (search terms – Армия Шахмат Чемпионат or СССР Армейский Шахмат Чемпионат)
- 1945: 1st
- 1946: 2nd
- 1947: 3rd
- 1948: 4th
- 1949: 5th
- 1950: 6th
- 1951: Vladimir Zagorovsky (1925–1994) won the 7th Soviet Army championship in Moscow; in 1952, he won the Moscow championship; he later won the 4th Correspondence World Championship[2]
- 1952: Yuri Shaposhnikov (1925–1993) won the 8th Soviet Army championship[2]
- 1954: Anatoly Lutikov (1933-1989) and Arkady Novopashin (1932-2014) tied for 1st in the 10th Soviet Army championship in Riga[2]
- 1956: Leonid Stein won the 12th Soviet Army championship[2]
- 1958: Jacob Yukhtman (ru) (1935–1985) won the Soviet Army championship in Moscow[2]
- 1959: 13th
- August 1960: 14th in Vilnius
- 1961: Eduard Gufeld (1936–2002), won the 15th Soviet Army championship in Sevastopol[2]
- 1962: Vitaly Zhilin won the 16th Soviet Army championship in Odessa[2]
- 1963: Vladimir Makogonov (1904–1993) and Yuri Gusev tied for 1st in the 17th Soviet Army championship in Moscow[2]
- 1964: Vladimir Savon (1940–2005) won the 18th Soviet Army championship in Riga[2]
- 1965: Vladimir Savon won the 19th Soviet Army championship in Odessa[2]
- 1966: Viktor Zheliandinov (born 1935) won the 20th Soviet Army championship[2]
- September 1967: Viktor Zheliandinov won the 21st Soviet Army championship[2]
- June 1968: Anatoly Lein (1931–2018) won the 22nd Soviet Army championship in Volgograd[2]
- November 1969: Janis Klovans (1935–2010) won the 23rd Soviet Army championship in Riga[2]
- July 1970: Rafael Vaganian, 24th Soviet Army championship in Sevastopol[2]
- 1972: Valerij Zhuravliov, 26th Soviet Army championship (shared with Semyon Furman)
- July 1976: Josif Dorfman, 30th Soviet Army championship[2]
- 1979: Gennadij Timoscenko, 33rd Soviet Army championship in Tashkent
- 1981: Miron Sher, 2-way tie, 35th Soviet Army championship (Russian: 35-й Чемпионат КА По Шахматам)
- 1982: 36th
- 1983: 37th: Tseitlin vs. Vyzhmanavin
- 1984: 38th
- 1985: 39th
- 1986: 40th
- 1987: 41st in Tashkent
- May 1988: Evgeny Vladimirov won the 42nd Soviet Army championship in Frunze[4]
- June 1989: in Novosibirsk
Other
[edit]- December 1969: Semyon Furman won the USSR All-Army championship in Leningrad
USSR Women's Chess Championships
[edit]- 1927: First USSR Women's Chess Championship
Russia
[edit]- A project of the Krasnaya Zvezda newspaper and FIDE with the assistance of the Center for Chess Culture and Information of the Russian National Public Library for Science and Technology – Nikolai Iwanowitsch Kralin (de), director
- 24th open championship of the Armed Forces of the Russian Federation on the correspondence solution of chess compositions
- July 31, 2020: Retired Colonel Yuri Grigorievich Paramonov (Russian: Юрий Григорьевич Парамонов)
- Armed Forces of the Republic of Belarus
- Classical chess
- February 19, 2020: Alexandr Olegovych Sokolov (Russian: Александр Олегович Соколов)
Bibliography
[edit]Annotations
[edit]Notes
[edit]References
[edit]News media
- "Персона Дня: Леонид Шамаев" [Person of the Day: Leonid Shamaev (ru)]. Russian Chess Federation (in Russian). May 27, 2020. Retrieved September 2, 2020.
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(help) - Zakharov, Alexey "Spectre" ("Spektrowski") (October 18, 2015). "Serper's Long Lost Game". Spektrowski's Blog at Chess.com. Retrieved September 2, 2020.
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(help) - Wall, Bill (né William Dale Wall; born 1951) (it). "Chess in the Armed Forces". Bill Wall's Chess Page. Palm Bay, Florida. Retrieved September 2, 2020.
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(help)CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link) CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link) - Железный (Zhelezny), Станислав (Stanislav) (January 5, 2002). "Победу Разумом Одержим! Начинаем Разговор О Путях Возрождения Армейских Шахмат" [Victory Is Possessed by Reason! Starting a Conversation About Ways to Revive Army Chess]. Красная Звезда (in Russian).