Hermanis Matisons
Hermanis Matisons (German: Herman Mattison; 1894, Riga – 1932) was a Latvian chess player and one of world's most highly regarded chess masters in the early 1930s. He was also a leading composer of endgame studies. He died of tuberculosis at the age of 38.
In 1924, Matisons won the first Latvian Chess Championship tournament. Later that year he finished ahead of Fricis Apšenieks, and Edgard Colle to win the first World Amateur Championship, which was organized in conjunction with the Paris Olympic Games, followed by Max Euwe in 1928. Matisons played first board for Latvia at the 1931 Chess Olympiad in Prague and defeated Akiba Rubinstein and Alexander Alekhine, then the reigning World Champion.
Sixty of Matisons' endgame studies were collected in the 1987 book Mattison's Chess Endgame Studies by T.G. Whitworth.
References
[edit]- Hooper, David; Whyld, Kenneth (1992), The Oxford Companion to Chess (2nd ed.), Oxford University Press, p. 252, ISBN 0-19-280049-3
- 1894 births
- 1932 deaths
- Chess players from Riga
- People from Riga county
- Latvian Jews
- Latvian chess players
- Jewish chess players
- Chess composers
- 20th-century chess players
- Chess Olympiad competitors
- Tuberculosis deaths in Latvia
- 20th-century deaths from tuberculosis
- European chess biography stubs
- Latvian sportspeople stubs