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Wilhelm Steinitz
Steinitz 
 

Number of games in database: 1,085
Years covered: 1859 to 1899
Overall record: +472 -192 =152 (67.2%)*
   * Overall winning percentage = (wins+draws/2) / total games in the database. 269 exhibition games, blitz/rapid, odds games, etc. are excluded from this statistic.

MOST PLAYED OPENINGS
With the White pieces:
 Vienna Opening (111) 
    C25 C29 C28 C27 C26
 French Defense (86) 
    C00 C11 C01 C10 C02
 King's Gambit Accepted (71) 
    C39 C37 C38 C35 C34
 French (51) 
    C00 C11 C10 C13 C12
 King's Gambit Declined (42) 
    C30 C31 C32
 Evans Gambit (30) 
    C51 C52
With the Black pieces:
 Ruy Lopez (132) 
    C62 C70 C60 C64 C65
 Evans Gambit (74) 
    C52 C51
 Giuoco Piano (37) 
    C50 C53 C54
 King's Gambit Accepted (28) 
    C33 C39 C37 C38 C34
 Scotch Game (22) 
    C45
 Three Knights (16) 
    C46
Repertoire Explorer

NOTABLE GAMES: [what is this?]
   Steinitz vs von Bardeleben, 1895 1-0
   Steinitz vs Chigorin, 1892 1-0
   Steinitz vs A Mongredien, 1862 1-0
   S Dubois vs Steinitz, 1862 0-1
   S Rosenthal vs Steinitz, 1873 0-1
   Steinitz vs A Mongredien, 1862 1-0
   Zukertort vs Steinitz, 1886 0-1
   Steinitz vs Paulsen, 1870 1-0
   Steinitz vs A Sellman, 1885 1-0
   Steinitz vs Lasker, 1896 1-0

WORLD CHAMPIONSHIPS: [what is this?]
   Steinitz - Zukertort World Championship Match (1886)
   Steinitz - Chigorin World Championship Match (1889)
   Steinitz - Gunsberg World Championship Match (1890)
   Steinitz - Chigorin World Championship Rematch (1892)
   Steinitz - Lasker World Championship Match (1894)
   Lasker - Steinitz World Championship Rematch (1896)

NOTABLE TOURNAMENTS: [what is this?]
   Bird - Steinitz (1866)
   Anderssen - Steinitz (1866)
   Vienna (1873)
   Steinitz - Blackburne (1876)
   Steinitz - Martinez (1882)
   Vienna (1882)
   2nd City Chess Club Tournament (1894)
   Baden-Baden (1870)
   London (1883)
   St. Petersburg Quadrangular 1895/96 (1895)
   Paris (1867)
   Vienna (1898)
   Hastings (1895)
   Nuremberg (1896)
   London (1899)

GAME COLLECTIONS: [what is this?]
   The t_t Players: Staunton, Steinitz & Zukertort by fredthebear
   Match Steinitz! by amadeus
   Match Steinitz! by docjan
   The Dark Side by lonchaney
   Stupendous Play from Steinitz' Day Lee by fredthebear
   World Champion - Steinitz (I.Linder/V.Linder) by Qindarka
   World Champion - Steinitz (I.Linder/V.Linder) by nbabcox
   Stupendous Play from Steinitz' Day by Okavango
   World championship games A-Z by kevin86
   The t_t Players: The 1900s rok by fredthebear
   1883 Beyond London lks SP by fredthebear
   the rivals 1 by ughaibu
   y1870s - 1890s Classic Chess Principles Arise by plerranov
   y1870s - 1890s Classic Chess Principles Arise by fredthebear

GAMES ANNOTATED BY STEINITZ: [what is this?]
   Showalter vs Gossip, 1889
   J McConnell vs Steinitz, 1886
   Chigorin vs Gunsberg, 1889
   M Weiss vs N MacLeod, 1889
   Showalter vs Taubenhaus, 1889
   >> 130 GAMES ANNOTATED BY STEINITZ


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WILHELM STEINITZ
(born May-14-1836, died Aug-12-1900, 64 years old) Austria (federation/nationality United States of America)
PRONUNCIATION:
[what is this?]

William (né Wolfgang, aka Wilhelm) Steinitz, born Prague BOH (Austrian Empire); died New York, NY USA.

Wilhelm Steinitz is the earliest World Champion of chess recognized by FIDE.

Background

The last of thirteen sons of a hardware retailer, he was born in Prague in what was then the Kingdom of Bohemia within the Austrian Empire and which is now within the Czech republic. Like his father he was a Talmudic scholar, but then he left to study mathematics in the Vienna Polytechnic. He eventually dropped out of the Polytechnic to play chess professionally. Soon after, he played in the London tournament of 1862, and then settled in London for over twenty years, making his living at the London Chess Club. He emigrated to the USA in 1883, taking out US citizenship, living in New York for the rest of his life, and changing his first name to "William".

Matches

He was recognized as the world's leading player, and considered to be the world champion by many, after he defeated the then-acknowledged number one chess player in the world (now that Paul Morphy had retired), Adolf Anderssen, in a match in 1866 which he won by 8-6. However, it was not until his victory in the Steinitz - Zukertort World Championship Match (1886) – where he sat beside a US flag - that he was recognised as the first undisputed world chess champion. He successfully defended his title three times in the Steinitz - Chigorin World Championship Match (1889), the Steinitz - Gunsberg World Championship Match (1890), and in the Steinitz - Chigorin World Championship Rematch (1892). In 1894, Emanuel Lasker won the crown from Steinitz by winning the Steinitz - Lasker World Championship Match (1894) and retained it by winning the Lasker - Steinitz World Championship Rematch (1896).

Steinitz was an extremely successful match player. Between 1860 and 1897, he played 36 matches, winning every serious match with the exception of his two matches against Lasker. Some of the prominent players of the day that he defeated in match play other than in his world championship matches included Max Lange, Serafino Dubois, Frederick Deacon, Dionisio Martinez, Joseph Blackburne, Anderssen, Augustus Mongredien, Henry Bird, Johannes Zukertort, George Mackenzie, and Celso Golmayo Zupide.

Tournaments

Steinitz was more adept at winning matches than tournaments in his early years, a factor, which alongside his prolonged absences from competition chess after 1873, may have prevented more widespread recognition of his dominance of chess as world champion until the first "official" world championship match in 1886. Nevertheless, between 1859 and his death in 1900, the only tournament in which he did not win prize money was his final tournament in London in 1899. His wins include the Vienna Championship of 1861 which he won with 30/31 and earned him the nickname the "Austrian Morphy", the London Championship of 1862, Dublin 1865 (equal first with George MacDonnell), London 1872, equal first at Vienna 1873 and 1882 (the latter was the strongest tournament to that time, and Steinitz had just returned from 9 years of absence from tournament chess), and first in the New York Championship of 1894. Other successes include 3rd and 2nd at the Vienna Championships of 1859 and 1860 respectively, 2nd at Dundee in 1867, 3rd in Paris in 1867, 2nd in Baden Baden in 1870, 2nd in London in 1883, 5th at the Hastings super tournament in 1895, 2nd at the sextuple round robin St Petersburg quadrangular tournament behind Lasker and ahead of Harry Pillsbury and Mikhail Chigorin, 6th at Nuremburg in 1896, and 4th at Vienna in 1898.

Steinitz's Legacy

The extent of Steinitz's dominance in world chess is evident from the fact that from 1866, when he beat Adolf Anderssen, to 1894, when he relinquished the world crown to Emanuel Lasker, Steinitz won all his matches, sometimes by wide margins. His worst tournament performance in that period was third place in Paris in 1867. This period of Steinitz's career was closely examined by Chessmetrics exponent and advocate, Jeff Sonas, who wrote an article in 2005 in which he found that Steinitz was further ahead of his contemporaries in the 1870s than Robert James Fischer was in his peak period (1970–1972), that he had the third-highest total number of years as the world's top player, behind Emanuel Lasker and Garry Kasparov, and that he placed 7th in a comparison the length of time great players were ranked in the world's top three.

Despite his pre-eminence in chess for those decades in the late 19th century, Steinitz's main contribution to chess was as its first true theoretician. He rose to prominence in the 1860s on the back of highly competent handling of the romantic attacking style of chess that had been popularised by Morphy and Anderssen and which characterised the style of the era. However, in the Vienna tournament of 1873, he introduced a new positional style of play which not only commenced his run of 25 consecutive high level victories, but profoundly transformed the way chess was played from shortly after that time, when its efficacy was embraced by the chess world. It enabled him to establish his complete dominance over his long time rival, Johannes Zukertort, and to easily win the first official match for the World Championship.

Lasker summarised Steinitz's ideas as follows:

"In the beginning of the game ignore the search for combinations, abstain from violent moves, aim for small advantages, accumulate them, and only after having attained these ends search for the combination – and then with all the power of will and intellect, because then the combination must exist, however deeply hidden."

Although these ideas were controversial and fiercely debated for some years in what has become known as the <Ink Wars>, Lasker and the next generation of the world's best players acknowledged their debt to him.

"He was a thinker worthy of a seat in the halls of a University. A player, as the world believed he was, he was not; his studious temperament made that impossible; and thus he was conquered by a player ..." - <Emanuel Lasker>.

"He understood more about the use of squares than did Morphy, and contributed a great deal more to chess theory.' - <Bobby Fischer>.

Sources
<jessicafischerqueen>'s YouTube documentary http://www.youtube.com/playlist?lis... - in turn sourced mainly from <Kurt Landsberger's> biography "Bohemian Caesar."

References
Wikipedia article: Wilhelm Steinitz
https://www.findagrave.com/memorial...

Last updated: 2025-04-13 18:53:01

Try our new games table.

 page 1 of 44; games 1-25 of 1,085  PGN Download
Game  ResultMoves YearEvent/LocaleOpening
1. K Hamppe vs Steinitz 0-1231859ViennaC29 Vienna Gambit
2. Lenhof vs Steinitz 0-1451859Casual gameC23 Bishop's Opening
3. Steinitz vs Lenhof 1-0321859Casual gameC52 Evans Gambit
4. Steinitz vs P Meitner 1-0341859Casual gameC52 Evans Gambit
5. E Pilhal vs Steinitz 0-1211859Casual gameC53 Giuoco Piano
6. K Hamppe vs Steinitz 0-1281859Casual gameC38 King's Gambit Accepted
7. Steinitz vs F Nowotny 1-0311859Vienna CC tC55 Two Knights Defense
8. Steinitz vs NN 1-0121860UnknownC25 Vienna
9. Steinitz vs Harrwitz  0-1391860Casual gameB44 Sicilian
10. Steinitz vs NN  1-0201860Odds game000 Chess variants
11. Steinitz vs NN  1-0151860Casual gameC41 Philidor Defense
12. Steinitz vs NN 1-0161860Casual gameC50 Giuoco Piano
13. Steinitz vs NN  1-0181860Casual game000 Chess variants
14. NN vs Steinitz 0-1241860Casual gameC59 Two Knights
15. Harrwitz vs Steinitz  1-0251860Casual gameD20 Queen's Gambit Accepted
16. K Hamppe vs Steinitz 0-1311860Casual gameC27 Vienna Game
17. Steinitz vs NN  1-0201860Casual gameC52 Evans Gambit
18. Steinitz vs E Pilhal 1-0171860ViennaC52 Evans Gambit
19. Steinitz vs NN  1-0241860Odds game000 Chess variants
20. H Strauss vs Steinitz 0-1311860Casual gameC51 Evans Gambit
21. Steinitz vs H Strauss 1-0331860Casual gameC29 Vienna Gambit
22. Steinitz vs P Meitner 1-0261860Casual gameC55 Two Knights Defense
23. Steinitz vs Lang 1-0191860Casual gameC37 King's Gambit Accepted
24. Steinitz vs Reiner 1-0321860Casual gameC51 Evans Gambit
25. Steinitz vs Lang 1-0291860Casual gameC25 Vienna
 page 1 of 44; games 1-25 of 1,085  PGN Download
  REFINE SEARCH:   White wins (1-0) | Black wins (0-1) | Draws (1/2-1/2) | Steinitz wins | Steinitz loses  

Kibitzer's Corner
< Earlier Kibitzing  · PAGE 19 OF 48 ·  Later Kibitzing>
Dec-27-05  EmperorAtahualpa: Thanks a lot, <WannaBe> :)

And now for a serious answer to my question please?

Dec-28-05  ckr: Around the time Morphy was in Europe Steinitz was in Vienna. Steinitz came in third in the 1859 tournament in Veinna behind Hamppe and Jenay. Had Steinitz been in Paris the two may have played but I don't think Steinitz would have been considered "Match Material" at this time.
Dec-28-05  EmperorAtahualpa: I see, <ckr>, that makes sense. Thanks!
Dec-28-05  Kingsider: So,what are the chess principles os Steinitz? Is there a list out there on the internet? One of em is "dont make a weakness on the side being attacked"I should live so long to know what that means!
Dec-29-05  BIDMONFA: Wilhelm Steinitz

History Steinitz
http://www.bidmonfa.com/STEINITZ.htm

Feb-01-06  FHBradley: <Kingsider:> It's not on the internet, but the best summary of Steinitz's theory is probably Lasker's 'Manual of Chess', a book that makes wonderful reading.
Feb-02-06  MorphyMatt: strangest thing. He's one of my favorite players but I never know how to pronounce his name. How?
Feb-02-06  LancelotduLac: <MorphyMatt> He is also one of my favorites. His last name is pronounced "shti nits," (the first "i" is long as in "pie"). The accent is on the first syllable.
Feb-02-06  Jim Bartle: Just pronounce it like Sgt. Shultz saying "I know nussing!" and you're pretty close.
Feb-06-06  morpstau: Why is he called the starter of modern chess when Morphy challenged everyone in the world including Steinitz to a Pawn-and-move match, before he retired, and ther were no takers including Stinitz, Zorkotort, and Andersson.
Feb-06-06  RookFile: I don't know, morpstau. Steinitz would get routinely slapped around in open games by guys like Chigorin. It is true that Steinitz excelled at closed and semi-closed positions because of his understanding of how pawn structure influenced planning.
Feb-06-06  morpstau: Yes ROOKFILE i see i have atleast one who shares the same views as i do. Anyway this goes to show Morphys power over the game and his contemps.
Feb-06-06  RookFile: Steinitz was really just another very strong player at the time. For example, at a dinner, they asked the World Champion to stand, and both Steinitz and Zukertort rose. Steinitz would go on to win against Zukertort, of course, but at the time, there was not the awe of Steinitz that there was of Morphy.

This legend started with Lasker, who wrote about how great Steinitz was. You can either view Lasker's actions as an honorable thing to do, or take the cynical view that when you become champ, you extol the virtues of the guy you beat to secure your own place in history.

Feb-06-06  morpstau: Yes very intriging points indeed ROOKFILE and i admit Stinitz was great but imagine, just imagine if Morphy continued his chess career beyond 2 serious years and continued to improve and develope differnt theories and understandings to elevate his positional play, so that he would become not just very tough to beat but almost invinceable.
Feb-06-06
Premium Chessgames Member
  keypusher: The legend started because Steinitz beat all his rivals for thirty years. People did not need Emanuel Lasker to tell them what to think about Steinitz.

Anyone curious about Morphy's 1859 pawn and move challenge to the world can look on <SBC>'s excellent website. Anyone interested in knowing by how much Steinitz outstripped his contemporaries can look at <chessmetrics.com>.

Feb-06-06  morpstau: Hey KeyPUSHER the conversation was concerning Paul Morphys greater positional and combanational skill than the passive Stinitz. Not this Lasker-Stinitz bull@#$%!
Feb-06-06  whatthefat: That's right <morpstau>, nobody except Morphy contributed anything to the understanding of chess. It's well known that he actually refined the rules of the game. Before Morphy, bishops were only allowed to move one square at a time, and pieces could only capture other pieces of lower or equal value. Fischer built a temple in his honour, and it was there that Kasparov sacrificed his first born in honour of the Morphy.
Feb-06-06  morpstau: ya godditt sissta
Feb-06-06
Premium Chessgames Member
  keypusher: <Hey KeyPUSHER the conversation was concerning Paul Morphys greater positional and combanational skill than the passive Stinitz. Not this Lasker-Stinitz bull@#$%!>

Then run along to Morphy's page, <morpstau>. But you'll have a tough time keeping up with them there.

Feb-06-06  RookFile: In all truthfullness, Steintiz and Chigorin played a match, that but for the simplest of blunders by Chigorin would have been tied 9 to 9. In that match, Chigorin routinely crushed Steinitz when he had the white pieces, with his mastery of gambit play.

When you speak of 'modern' chess, as in, 21st century chess, you speak of chess involving dynamic piece play, players breaking all the rules with pawn play, playing moves like fxg6 instead of hxg6, etc.

This sounds a lot more like Chigorin than it does Steinitz.

Feb-07-06
Premium Chessgames Member
  Sneaky: "This little man has taught us all to play chess." -- Adolf Schwartz
Feb-07-06
Premium Chessgames Member
  keypusher: <In that match, Chigorin routinely crushed Steinitz when he had the white pieces, with his mastery of gambit play.>

I think it is more fair to say that Chigorin tended to beat Steinitz with white because Steinitz played horrible defenses against the Evans Gambit. Steinitz could play open games; see his matches with Blackburne.

<When you speak of 'modern' chess, as in, 21st century chess, you speak of chess involving dynamic piece play, players breaking all the rules with pawn play, playing moves like fxg6 instead of hxg6, etc.

This sounds a lot more like Chigorin than it does Steinitz.>

This is a very good point. But I would say that players had to learn the "rules" from Steinitz before they could learn to break them.

Feb-08-06  LancelotduLac: <Why is he called the starter of modern chess when Morphy challenged everyone in the world including Steinitz to a Pawn-and-move match, before he retired, and ther were no takers including Stinitz, Zorkotort, and Andersson.>

Steinitz and Zukertort were both virtual unknowns at the time of Morphy's challenge in 1859. Even though Steinitz was born a year before Morphy, his chess career did not really get going until the early 1860s, following Morphy's retirement. In Zukertort's case it was even later. Thus it is misleading to say that Morphy ever challenged Steinitz and Zukertort at the odds of pawn and move.

<In all truthfullness, Steinitz and Chigorin played a match, that but for the simplest of blunders by Chigorin would have been tied 9 to 9>.

Rather 12-12, had Chigorin converted his large advantage in the final game. This was their second World Championship match; they also played one in 1889, which Steinitz won handily by the score of 10.5-6.5

Feb-10-06
Premium Chessgames Member
  keypusher: <LancelotduLac> The Steinitz-Chigorin matches were scored (at the time) in terms of games won, not points. You had to win ten games to win the match. I think (but I am not positive) that a 9-9 score (in wins) would lead to a drawn match with Steinitz retaining the title. This is where Fischer got the idea, I think.
Feb-10-06  LancelotduLac: <keypusher> Right you are. I mistakenly used modern scoring.
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