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NEWS FLASH: De Ludo Schaccorum, by Luca Pacioli

by "Maple Tree" <none@[EMAIL PROTECTED] > Mar 31, 2008 at 04:15 PM

Here is an interesting story:

http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/life_and_style/court_and_social/article3523718.ece

http://www.iht.com/articles/ap/2008/03/14/europe/EU-GEN-Italy-Da-Vinci-Chess-Code.php

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Luca_Pacioli

March 29, 2008  WINNIPEG FREE PRESS     PAGE: F9

Chess

Freelance Writer
Cecil Rosner

THE chess world is buzzing with is very own Da Vinci Code mystery. A 
Renaissance-era book on chess recently resurfaced in the long-lost library

of an Italian count. The book, called De Ludo Schaccorum (Of the Game of 
Chess), is by Italian mathematician Luca Pacioli.

Pacioli wrote the book around 1500, and research by a Milan scholar
suggests 
he may have received assistance from a friend. That friend is none other 
than Leonardo da Vinci, one of Western civilization's greatest artists and

thinkers.

Pacioli's book contains more than 100 chess puzzles, each illustrated with
a 
diagram showing the position of the pieces, such as the one you see 
accompanying this column. But Pacioli's diagrams are all hand drawn, and 
experts have detected some amazing similarities between the artwork and da

Vinci's style.

The proportionality of the pieces suggests the hand of da Vinci, who 
produced numerous sketches on everything from birds in flight to
imaginative 
mechanical inventions. Most amazing of all is the suggestion that the 
illustration of the Queen is similar to a sketch da Vinci created
elsewhere 
for a fountain.

No one has offered conclusive proof of the claim yet, and some think it
may 
be a tactic on the part of the book's owners to increase its value. There
is 
an even more tantalizing suggestion. Da Vinci may have even composed some
of 
the puzzles.

The diagram accompanying this column is from Pacioli's book, with a slight

modification suggested by British grandmaster Raymond Keene. Black is 
already in check, so it is obviously Black's move, but the problem is to
see 
how White ends up mating Black. It's complicated. But so was the enigma of

Mona Lisa's smile.

There is still time to re-arrange your plans for tonight to attend an
active 
chess tournament at the McPhillips Street Station Casino. The event is
open 
to anyone aged 18 and older, and there are $500 in prizes.

The five-round event allows 20 minutes per player per game. Entry fee is 
$20. To register, sign up at the casino anytime from 6 to 6:50 tonight.
Play 
is expected to begin at 7 p.m. and will wrap up before 11 p.m.

Should you win one of those healthy cash prizes, just remember to head 
straight for the exit without any stopovers at the slot machines. Chess is
a 
game of skill. Slots are not.

This week's problem (Leonardo da Vinci?): Black, already in check, to
move, 
but White to demonstrate a mating attack. Solution to last problem: 1.Rh1.




 1 Posts in Topic:
NEWS FLASH: De Ludo Schaccorum, by Luca Pacioli
"Maple Tree" &l  2008-03-31 16:15:25 

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