Leonid Kubbel

{{Short description|Russian chess player (1891–1942)}}

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Image:Leonid kubbel-2.jpg

Karl Artur Leonid Kubbel ({{langx|ru|Леонид Иванович Куббель}}; 1891 or 1892 – 1942) was a Russian composer of chess endgame studies and problems.

Life

Kubbel was born in Saint Petersburg at the end of 1891, or beginning of 1892{{Cite book| last=Gaige | first=Jeremy | author-link=Jeremy Gaige | year=1987 | title=Chess Personalia, A Biobibliography | publisher=McFarland | isbn=0-7864-2353-6 | page=231}} Gaige suggests that there is some evidence in support of 6 January 1892 and died in the same city (then called Leningrad) on 18 April 1942. He was christened Karl Artur Leonid, but dropped the first two names around the time of the 1917 Russian Revolution.[http://www.arves.org/Biografie.htm Biographical data Endgamestudy composers] {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20080915205227/http://www.arves.org/Biografie.htm |date=2008-09-15 }}

He composed more than 1500 endgame studies and chess problems, many of which were awarded first prize for their great beauty and original conception. He was also a fairly strong over the board player finishing 5th in Leningrad championships on 2 occasions (1929, 1930). He is generally considered one of the greatest of all endgame composers. He was a chemical engineer by profession.

Leonid's brothers, Arvid and Evgeny, were also chess players. Arvid Kubbel was a strong over-the-board master, having played in the first four USSR chess championships, while Evgeny was himself an endgame composer.

Both Leonid and Evgeny Kubbel died of starvation in 1942 during the Nazi siege of Leningrad, while Arvid was executed by the NKVD in 1938.[http://www.chehovchess.ru/lib/lek/5-eng.htm Журнал о шахматах - здесь Вы найдете статьи, советы, рассказы о шахматах и шахматистах] {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20070629093443/http://www.chehovchess.ru/lib/lek/5-eng.htm |date=2007-06-29 }}

A study by Leonid Kubbel

This is one of Leonid Kubbel's many masterpieces. The Black a-pawn apparently cannot be stopped from promotion, after which the game would be lost for White; however, a subtle plan avoids defeat and checkmates the black king. Video analysis of this study can be found {{YouTube|qfBBv9kSGkM|here}}.

{{chess diagram

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| Leonid Kubbel
Schachmatny Listok 1922

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|kl| | | | | | |

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| | | |pd| | | |bl

|pd| | | | | | |

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|{{center|White to move and win}}

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Solution:

  • 1. Nc6!! (threatens Nb4+, blocking the a-pawn) Kxc6
  • 2. Bf6 Kd5
  • 3. d3 a2
  • 4. c4+ Kc5(4....dxc3 5.Bxc3 is a simple technical win)
  • 5. Kb7! a1=Q (if 5...Kd6 or 5... Kb4 then 6.Bxd4 stopping the pawn)
  • 6. Be7 checkmate.

{{Clear}}

Works on Leonid Kubbel

  • 25 ausgewählte Endspielstudien von Leonid Kubbel (German), Jan van Reek, 1996.
  • Leonid Kubbel’s Chess Endgame Studies, TG Whitworth, 2004.
  • Леонид Куббель (Russian), J. Vladimirowitsch and Y.Fokin, 1984.

References

{{Reflist}}

- Preface by Grigory Levenfish in: "K.A.L. Kubbel Schachmatnich etjudov: 150 Endgame Studies", Leningrad, 1925 (Russian).

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Category:1890s births

Category:1942 deaths

Category:Russian people of Baltic German descent

Category:Russian chess players

Category:Soviet chess players

Category:Chess composers

Category:Chess players from Saint Petersburg

Category:Deaths by starvation

Category:Victims of the Siege of Leningrad

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