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210:.com assigns retrospective historical ratings, using modern mathematical algorithms, based on available results. His peak rating of 2546 is for mid-1851, fourth in the world. However, Chessmetrics is missing many of Szen's important results. In a modern context, this rating would be at the level of a strong
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Szen was certainly within or near the world's top ten players for most of his playing career, and his result at London 1851 placed him on the edge of the top five. There were no international titles or ratings for chess in his era. Formal titles began only in 1950, and international ratings in 1970.
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From 1836 to 1839, Szen travelled extensively throughout much of Europe, including France, Germany and
England, playing chess wherever he went. In 1836 Szén played a match in
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In Szen's era, international tournament competition was very rare, with long-distance travel being both cumbersome and expensive. The website
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In 1839, Szén founded the
Budapest Chess Club (Pesti Sakk-kör). In the same year, he lost a match to
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by 4½-½. He actually scored the highest percentage in the tournament. In 1852, he drew a match with
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155:(1. e4 e5 2. Nf3 Nc6 3. Bc4 Be7), which is playable but rarely seen in modern top-level play.
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Szén took fifth place at the world's first international chess tournament,
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and two moves. Szén won with 13 wins and 12 losses, and no
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Dizionario enciclopedico degli scacchi, Mursia, Milan 1971
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for the city of Pest, which later merged with the city of
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of Pest, playing with any opponent for a stake of 20
280:chessmetrics.com, the Jozsef Szen results file
271:chessmetrics.com, the Jozsef Szen results file
45:He obtained a law degree, and later became a
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248:"Timeline of chess games from Jerry Spinrad"
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110:. Also in 1836, Szen drew a match with
324:Sportspeople from the Austrian Empire
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289:chessgames.com, the Jozsef Szen file
158:In 1851, he lost a match by 13-7 to
147:, that beat a Paris team, headed by
96:Louis-Charles Mahé de La Bourdonnais
228:rook and bishop versus rook endgame
34:, Hungary – 13 January 1857) was a
83:. He discovered and described the
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297:Adriano Chicco, Giorgio Porreca,
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177:4-0, and in the fourth round
53:(on the opposite bank of the
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334:19th-century chess players
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61:. He often played in the
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115:Hyacinthe Henri Boncourt
179:Hugh Alexander Kennedy
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16:Hungarian chess player
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212:International Master
143:players, including
72:Very strong in the
160:Lionel Kieseritzky
149:Pierre Saint-Amant
124:algebraic notation
122:This article uses
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153:Hungarian Defense
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250:. Archived from
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201:Playing strength
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256:. Retrieved
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55:Danube River
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36:chess master
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319:1857 deaths
314:1805 births
167:London 1851
28:József Szén
23:József Szén
308:Categories
258:2010-05-10
234:References
133:Karl Mayet
63:Café Worm
38:from the
218:See also
112:Parisian
80:Philidor
67:Kreuzers
59:Budapest
74:endgame
195:London
187:Vienna
137:Berlin
108:draws
94:with
92:Paris
104:pawn
100:odds
51:Buda
32:Pest
102:of
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