Difference between revisions 7658599 and 7658607 on simplewiki

{{Infobox chess player
|playername = Adolf Anderssen
|image = and00278.png
|birthname = Karl Ernst Adolf Anderssen
|country = {{GER}}
|datebirth = {{birth date|1818|7|6}}
|placebirth = [[Breslau]], now Wrocław, [[Poland]]
|datedeath = {{death date and age|1879|3|13|1818|7|6}}
|placedeath =
|title =
|worldchampion =  1851–1858, 1860–1866, 1868–1871 (unofficial)

|womensworldchampion =
|rating =
|peakrating =
}}

'''Karl Ernst Adolf Anderssen''' ([[Breslau]], 6 July 1818 – Breslau, 13 March 1879) was a [[Germany|German]] [[chess master]], and a teacher of mathematics. He was recogniszed as the [[List of Wsecond unofficial world Cchess Cchampions#World Champions pre-FIDE|best player in the world]] (after Paul Morphy) for much of the time between 1851 and 1870- 1858 and 1860 - 1871. 

Anderssen won three great international tournaments: the first in [[London]] 1851, then London 1862 and [[Baden-Baden]] 1870. Anderssen lost matches in 1858 to [[Paul Morphy]] and, narrowly, to [[Wilhelm Steinitz|Steinitz]] in 1866. He was also a chess problem composer.<ref name=Encyc>Hooper, David and Whyld, Kenneth 1992. ''The Oxford companion to chess'' 2nd ed, Oxford University Press. {{ISBN|0-19-280049-3}}.</ref><sup>p16</sup>

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{{DEFAULTSORT:Anderssen, Adolf}}
[[Category:1818 births]]
[[Category:1879 deaths]]
[[Category:German chess players]]
[[Category:German mathematicians]]
[[Category:People from former German territories]]
[[Category:People from Wrocław]]