The jewel in the crown of Samizdata.net
A blog for people with a critically rational individualist perspective. We are developing the social individualist meta-context for the future. From the very serious to the extremely frivolous... lets see what is on the mind of the Samizdata people.

Samizdata, derived from Samizdat /n. a system of clandestine publication of banned literature in the USSR
[Russ.,= self-publishing house]
There is much to find for those who look
We are not alone
Made possible by...
 
December 09, 2003
Tuesday
 
 
Hastings: 1895 and all that!
Antoine Clarke (London)  Events • Historical views

I'm hoping to enter the Hastings Weekend Chess Congress at the first weekend after the New Year. I have never previously been to the entry point to the UK of Perry de Havilland's marauding ancestors. They were among the (so far) most successful gang of 11th century "asylum seekers".

In order of Anglosphere fame I suppose Hastings ranks as:

  1. The place where the Norman Conquest happened. And since I spent much of yesterday enduring endless processions of fairweather English rugby fans parading around central London, pretending they know what a three-quarter line is, and I lost money on France to win the rugby world cup, I remind Anglo-Saxons that the battle was the most decisive result between the two countries.
    [I feel better already!]
  2. Captain Hastings, the nice but dim sidekick of Agatha Christie's fictional Belgian detective Hercule Poirot. The main problem being that most Belgians I have met are either extremely racist (so would not live in London), or have not got as many grey cells as Hastings between them. Or both.
  3. The site of the most famous chess tournament ever - the 1895 Hastings Christmas Tournament, and the scene of one of the all-time classic matches: former world champion Wolfgang Wilhelm Steinitz versus Curt von Bardeleben. On Black's 25th move, von Bardeleben, in Prussian fashion, realising that the situation was lost, is said to have got up without a word, put on his hat and walked back to his hotel, leaving his clock to run down and lose on time default. I enclose this link from a Brazilian web site still raving about the game over 100 years later. I googled 295 references to this one game.
    My immediate concern is to get my entry in before the late entry penalty and to find a bed and breakfast to stay in Hastings on the two nights of January 2nd and 3rd. Any advice gratefully accepted.

After that it will be time to prepare some tactical plays for the tournament itself: and exhausting schedule of one match ending on Friday night at 11pm, then three matches on Saturday running from 9.30am to 11pm pm, and another two matches on Sunday that I haven't even begun to worry about.

No kidding: I shall be doing some weight training over the next few weeks just to help with my stamina. (I can hear Adriana sniggering already) I shall also be re-freshing my familiarity with a few opening sequences. My nightmare would be a repeat of a 1995 match in Mill Hill against the then London under 8 year old champion, a certain David Ho. My favourite win posted online to date is this one, a tough positional game against a Minnesota amateur.

Comments

My marauding ancestors too. Dodge is a Norman name (meaning breast). Nice place Hastings.


Posted by Andrew Ian Dodge at December 9, 2003 01:02 PM

I thought Norman Conquest was the Stalinist half brother of Robert Conquest and that the two haven't spoken in years.


Posted by ZHombre at December 9, 2003 01:36 PM

Bit disappointed that von Bardeleben merely walked back to his hotel. After your dramatic introduction I was expecting him to walk into the sea never to be seen again, at the very least.


Posted by Martin Adamson at December 9, 2003 03:01 PM

**WARNING ANAL RETENTIVE ALERT **

The Normans actually landed at Penvensey in Sussex in the September of 1066. At the time Harold's army was trudging back from defeating a Norwegian invasion at the battle of Stamford Bridge. When his forces finally met the Normans it was well into October and the battle took place in what is now, somewhat helpfully, called Battle, which is some 7 or 8 miles north of Hastings.

What is amazing to us, well me anyway, today is the Normans where on shore for a whole month before the battle took place. Heck they even managed to build a castle in Pevensey in that time!

I had always assumed that the Normans had to perform a D-Day style landing under fire. Now I know differently its obvious but that's what happens when one is exposed to war images beamed around the planet by satellite in real time.

Anyway this is me, a month and a half ago, stood on the very spot where Harold copped it. (Assuming that is what actually happened - isn't there some doubt now?)


Posted by mark holland at December 9, 2003 04:19 PM

11th Century "Asylum seekers"?

You mean they were being persecuted in their native Normandy? They came over here looking for jobs? Did they apply for Housing Benefit and Education vouchers? Did the Saxons have a Refugee Council to represent their interests?

Good grief, this is whole slab of English history that I have sadly neglected to learn.


Posted by David Carr at December 9, 2003 06:57 PM

Maybe they came for the Hastings Chess Congress of 1066 and Harold just missunderstood them ?


Posted by Jacob at December 9, 2003 09:54 PM

They came for housing benefit and took over the whole d*** shop!


Posted by Antoine Clarke at December 9, 2003 10:25 PM

Antoine,

Sorry to spike your nationalist fervour but, surely, the Battle of Hastings was the most decisive result between the three, not two countries. William's lot originated in Norway, like the good people of Penrith. It's said that genetically no trace of them survives among the modern and perfectly Gallic denizens of Normandy, which is very odd. Perhaps they all came here and have been living - like Perry, no doubt - in draughty stone piles, speaking terribly porsh and marrying one another.

That being so I expect Harold would be quite pleased to see the end of the hereditary peers at Westminster. Don't know what he'd make of Mr Abramovic's Stamford Bridge, though.


Posted by Guessedworker at December 10, 2003 11:05 AM

I lived in Hastings (well, St Leonards, ekchew'lly) for about a decade and played in the Hastings Christmas tournament twice: Dummy Division. It was so cold both times I played in gloves.


Posted by Theodopoulos Pherecydes at December 10, 2003 07:44 PM

When my wife once asked me, "But what did the battle of Hastings MEAN? What was different afterwords?", the look of horror on her face when I replied "That you had to speak Old French to the govt. for the next 200 years" was priceless.


Posted by David Mercer at December 10, 2003 08:04 PM

"Wolfgang Steinitz versus Curt von Bardeleben. On Black's 25th move, von Bardeleben, in Prussian fashion, realising that the situation was lost, is said to have got up without a word, put on his hat and walked back to his hotel, leaving his clock to run down and lose on time default."

Well, in all the 295 references to this game, you might have noticed that Steintitz's name is Wilhelm, or William.

There a story about that game whereas Baron von Bardeleben left a note, while Steinitz was away from the table, saying "Saw it, went home."


Posted by Sarah Beth at March 1, 2004 02:50 AM

Dear Sir(s)

I have briefly visited this homepage and would like to make a small correction at one detail: you mentioned that Curt von Bardeleben's opponent was Wolfgang Steinitz (sorry, it's Wilhelm Steinitz).
I am a chess history enthusiast and always study it to give better informations to my pupils (I work at a public school in Brasília, in which I give chess among other subjects).
Sincerely yours

Marcelo Bruno Rodrigues


Posted by Marcelo Bruno Rodrigues at August 21, 2005 12:19 PM
Post a comment









Remember personal info?


Enter anti-spambot Turing code:





Select some text and click this to format it as a quote Make the selected text bold Make the selected text italic Add a web link


Basic html active.

Alas, but for obscure reasons Mozilla, Mac and Linux users shall not harness to power of the push-button formatting options and shall therefore compose basic html with their bare hands. Yet Mozilla, Mac and Linux users shall not fear, for we shall reveal forthwith the mysteries of Basic Html:

<strong>This text in-between is bold</strong>

<em>This text is in italics</em>

And
<blockquote>This is a quote</blockquote>
Remember to close your opened tags as such: <tag> tagged text and closing </tag> and we promise you will get out of here alive.

For adding links, either use the link URL button on the toolbar or enter your code by hand in the following format:
<a href="http://www.your_link.com">your link text or description here</a>

Movable Type's anti-spambot e-mail address protection is enabled.

You are a guest on private property. Have fun but please be civil and succinct. Blogroaches will be persecuted, not to mention IP banned.

Long third party quotes or articles will also be deleted... so just link to articles you think are germane to your comment, don't quote the whole bloody thing.