The Knight Challenge

Edward Winter

(1998)

knight

Illustration from Das leidenschaftliche Spiel by Gustav Schenk (Bremen, 1936)



How does the knight move? Or, rather, how can the knight’s move be described succinctly? Innumerable formulations have been proposed, but where is the ‘perfect’ definition? Readers are invited to try their hand, and for general guidance a sample of some of the old-timers’ efforts is offered.



C.N. 4693 mentioned that page 3 of Across the Board: The Mathematics of Chessboard Problems by John J. Watkins (Princeton and Oxford, 2004) offered a simple wording which may be better than any of those quoted above:



In C.N. 5096 Jon Crumiller (Princeton, NJ, USA) gave the following pre-nineteenth-century examples:

Our correspondent mentioned too that the description quoted above from Stratagems of Chess (1817) is a word-for-word copy from page 117 of Hoyle’s Games Improved (1800) and that a very similar text occurs on page 88 of R. Lambe’s The History of Chess (1764):

‘The Knights move obliquely, stepping upon every third square, including that which they quit; from black to white, and from white to black, over the heads of men, which none else do.’





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