Capablanca Chess Variation
By Hans Aberg
Introduction
I have a variation of Capablanca Chess to submit, as well some comments on Capa Chess.
My variation has two differences from Capa Chess:
1. The new pieces, the Archbishop (moving as either a Bishop or Knight) and the
Chancellor (moving as either a Rook or Knight) are placed next to the Queen side
and King side Rooks, respectively. In Capablanca
Chess these are put between the Knight and Bishops. The setup is shown
below.
(Graphic created using Wim van Beusekom's "MacChess" graphics. -
Ed.)
2. There is Enhanced Castling in use, defined so that the conditions for
admitting the Enhanced Castling are the same as in traditional Castling (the
King and the Rook must not have moved, squares in between are vacant, and the squares that the King originate from, pass through, or arrive at cannot
be under threat), but the King can move to any of the empty squares between the
King and the Rook, and the Rook can move to any of the squares that the King originated from or passed through.
The motivation for trying out the array (1) is to get the Knights closer to the
center, where they are more useful, as from Orthodox Chess it is known that the
Knights are inefficient towards the edges of the board. Also, Knights become weaker on a larger board. In addition, one should be able to play
traditional opening developments, including Fianchetto.
In the Capablanca's Chess array, the two new pieces, the Archbishop and the
Chancellor, are next to the Queen and the King. Capablanca is reported to have
experimented with different arrays. It strikes me that he might have settled for
this variation because his opening play involved the four center pawns of each
opponent (i.e. those in front of the King, Queen, the Archbishop and the
Chancellor), and not only mainly the two pawns of each color in front of the
King and Queen as in Orthodox Chess. Perhaps only experimentation with playing
games using the different arrays can tell which one is preferable.
The motivations of the Enhanced Castling (2) are to equalize the difference
between Queen and King side Castling, as well as making the Castling move more
efficient. Hopefully, more powerful moves will shorten the length of the games. The Enhanced Castling can of course be used in some other Chess
Variation, like Orthodox Chess and Capablanca Chess.
Some comments on Capablanca Chess:
The book by John Gollon, "Chess Variations, Ancient, Regional and
Modern" says that H. E. Bird had made an earlier variation (50 years
before) of Capablanca Chess, where the new pieces are placed next to the King
and the Queen. The book also reverses (relative the Capablanca's
Chess page) the Capablanca Chess board square colors, so that the White
Queen end up on a white square in its initial position, as in Orthodox Chess
then.
The book also mentions a "Chancellor Chess" on a 9x9 board, invented
by Ben R. Foster, but the author is unable to reconstruct the game fully.
I made some suggestions for the relative strengths of the new pieces:
In the traditional system, the Queen is set to 9 pawns, the Rook to 5 pawns and
the Bishop (at least in my Chess computer program) to 3.3 Pawns. Thus, the
combination of moving as both as a Bishop and a Rook into a single piece, the Queen, gains a bonus of extra 9 - 3.5 + 5 = 0.7 pawns, or about
8.43%. If I add the extra 8.43% pawns to the new two-combination pieces, I get
the following table.
Piece | Empirical Relative Value | |
P | Pawn | 1.0 |
N | Knight | 3.0 |
B | Bishop | 3.3 |
R | Rook | 5.0 |
A | Archbishop | 6.8 |
C | Chancellor | 8.7 |
Q | Queen | 9.0 |
K | King | 4.0 |
It is a funny thing setting a value on the King, as if it is lost, the game is
over. But this value can be used locally on the board in evaluating endgame
positions empirically.
In the Carrera's Chess array the two new
pieces, the Archbishop and the Chancellor, have reversed positions. One might
prefer the Chancellor on the King's side, though, because the Chancellor
is more powerful than the Archbishop, thus helping to balance up the weaker
King's side material.