List of Jewish chess players
Jewish players and theoreticians have long been involved in the game of chess and have significantly contributed to the development of chess. Chess gained popularity amongst Jews in the 12th century. The game was privileged by distinguished rabbis, as well as by women.
Of the first 13 undisputed world champions, six were Jewish or had some Jewish ancestry: Wilhelm Steinitz, Emanuel Lasker, Mikhail Botvinnik, Mikhail Tal, Bobby Fischer and Garry Kasparov. The Modern School of Chess espoused by Steinitz and Siegbert Tarrasch, the Hypermodernism influenced by Aron Nimzowitsch and Richard Réti, and the Soviet Chess School promoted by Botvinnik were all strongly influenced by Jewish players. Other influential Jewish chess theoreticians, writers and players include Johannes Zukertort, Savielly Tartakower, Akiba Rubinstein, Gyula Breyer, Rudolf Spielmann, Samuel Reshevsky, Reuben Fine, David Bronstein, and Miguel Najdorf.
Arpad Elo, the inventor of the scientific rating system employed by FIDE, analysed some 476 major tournament players from the 19th century onward, and of the 51 highest ranked players, approximately one half were Jewish. This includes one of the strongest ever players, Garry Kasparov, who was world No. 1 from 1985 until his retirement in 2005. Kasparov is of Jewish descent, through his father. Bobby Fischer, the highest rated player in history when he became world champion in 1972, had a Jewish mother and likely Jewish father despite antisemitic views. The list also includes Judit Polgár, widely regarded as the strongest female chess player ever.
Beer-sheba in Israel is the city with the most chess grandmasters per capita in the world. Israel has also won one silver and one bronze medal at Chess Olympiads.
List
The list refers to chess players who are Jewish and have attained outstanding achievements in chess.- Aaron (Albert) Alexandre, German-born French-English
- Simon Alapin, Lithuanian
- Lev Alburt, Russian/American
- Izaak Appel, Polish, killed by the Nazis
- Lev Aronin, Russian/Soviet
- Levon Aronian, Armenian grandmaster, World Cup champion twice
- Arnold Aurbach, Polish-born French
- Yuri Averbakh, Russian grandmaster who was the only GM to become a centenarian and who played in one Candidates tournament
- Mary Weiser Bain, born in Hungary, immigrated to the United States as a teenager, first American woman to represent the U.S. in an organized chess competition, won the U.S. Women's Chess Championship in 1951, awarded the Woman International Master title in 1952
- Dina Belenkaya Russian-Israeli chess player, commentator, Twitch streamer, and YouTuber who holds the title of Woman Grandmaster
- Anjelina Belakovskaia, Ukrainian-born US woman grandmaster
- Alexander Beliavsky, Ukrainian-born Soviet/Slovenian grandmaster
- Joel Benjamin, American grandmaster
- Ossip Bernstein, Ukrainian-born French grandmaster
- Arthur Bisguier, US grandmaster
- Abram Blass, Polish
- Isaac Boleslavsky, Ukrainian-born Soviet grandmaster
- Mikhail Botvinnik, Russian/Soviet grandmaster and 6th undisputed world champion
- Gyula Breyer, Hungarian, pioneer of the hypermodern school, important chess theorist, blindfold simultaneous record holder
- David Bronstein, Ukrainian-born Soviet grandmaster,
- Oscar Chajes, Ukrainian/Polish/Austrian-born US
- Vitaly Chekhover, Russian
- Isabelle Choko, Polish-French concentration camp survivor
- Erich Cohn, German
- Wilhelm Cohn, German
- Moshe Czerniak, Polish-born Israeli
- Arnold Denker, US grandmaster
- Arthur Dunkelblum, Polish-born Belgian
- Mark Dvoretsky, noted Russian trainer and international master
- Roman Dzindzichashvili, Georgian-born Israeli American grandmaster
- Vereslav Eingorn, Ukrainian grandmaster
- Berthold Englisch, Austrian
- Larry Evans, US grandmaster
- Rafał Feinmesser, Polish, killed in Warsaw during Holocaust
- Reuben Fine, US grandmaster
- Alexander Flamberg, Polish
- Salo Flohr, Ukrainian-born Czech and Soviet grandmaster
- Henryk Friedman, Polish, killed by the Nazis
- Paulino Frydman, Polish-born Argentine
- Boris Gelfand, Belarusian-born Israeli grandmaster, World Cup champion
- Efim Geller, Ukrainian-born Soviet grandmaster
- Harry Golombek, English
- Eduard Gufeld, Ukrainian grandmaster
- Boris Gulko, German-born Russian US grandmaster
- Isidor Gunsberg, Hungarian-born English
- Ilya Gurevich, Russian-born US grandmaster and junior World champion
- Mikhail Gurevich, Ukrainian-born Russian Turkish grandmaster
- Dmitry Gurevich Born in 1956, Russian/American grandmaster
- Lev Gutman, Latvian-born Israeli German grandmaster
- Daniel Harrwitz, Prussian/Polish/German-born English French
- Israel Horowitz, US
- Bernhard Horwitz, German-born English
- Dawid Janowski, Belarusian/Polish-born French grandmaster
- Max Judd, US
- Gregory Kaidanov, Ukrainian-born Russian US grandmaster
- Julio Kaplan, Argentine-born Puerto Rican US grandmaster and World junior champion
- Mona May Karff, Moldovan-born US woman master
- Isaac Kashdan, US grandmaster
- Alexander Khalifman, Russian grandmaster and World champion
- Stanisław Kohn, Polish, killed by the Nazis
- Ignatz von Kolisch, Hungarian/Slovakian-born Austrian grandmaster
- George Koltanowski, Belgian-born US grandmaster
- Viktor Korchnoi, Russian-born grandmaster
- Yair Kraidman, Israeli grandmaster
- Leon Kremer, Polish
- Abraham Kupchik, Belarusian/Polish-born US
- Alla Kushnir, Russian Israeli woman grandmaster
- Salo Landau, Polish-born Dutch, killed by the Nazis
- Berthold Lasker, Prussian/German/Polish-born master, elder brother of Emanuel Lasker
- Edward Lasker, Polish/German-born US
- Emanuel Lasker, Prussian/German/Polish-born US grandmaster and second undisputed world champion
- Anatoly Lein, Russian/Soviet/American grandmaster
- Konstantin Lerner, Ukrainian/Israeli grandmaster
- Grigory Levenfish, Polish/Russian-born grandmaster
- Irina Levitina, Russian-born US woman grandmaster
- Vladimir Liberzon, Russian-born Israeli grandmaster
- Andor Lilienthal, Russian-born Hungarian/Soviet grandmaster
- Samuel Lipschütz, Austria-Hungary/American
- Johann Löwenthal, Hungarian-born US English
- Moishe Lowtzky, Ukrainian-born Polish, killed by Nazis
- Gyula Makovetz, Hungarian
- Jonathan Mestel, English grandmaster and World U-16 champion
- Houshang Mashian, Iranian-Israeli chess master
- Jacques Mieses, German-born English grandmaster
- Miguel Najdorf, Polish-born Polish/Argentine grandmaster
- Daniel Naroditsky, American grandmaster and chess streamer
- Ian Nepomniachtchi, Russian grandmaster
- Aron Nimzowitsch, Latvian-born Danish
- Isaías Pleci, Argentine
- Judit Polgár, Hungarian grandmaster
- Susan Polgár, Hungarian-born US grandmaster and World champion
- Zsófia Polgár, Hungarian-born Israeli international master
- Lev Polugaevsky, Belarusian/Soviet grandmaster
- Dawid Przepiórka, Polish, killed by Nazis
- Lev Psakhis, Russian/Soviet/Israeli grandmaster
- Abram Rabinovich, Lithuanian/Russian
- Ilya Rabinovich, Russian
- Teimour Radjabov, Azerbaijani grandmaster
- Nukhim Rashkovsky, Russian grandmaster
- Samuel Reshevsky, Polish-born US grandmaster
- Richard Réti, Slovakian/Hungarian-born Czech
- Maxim Rodshtein, Israeli U-16 World champion
- Kenneth Rogoff, US grandmaster
- Eric Rosen, American international master, Twitch streamer, chess YouTuber
- Samuel Rosenthal, Polish-born French
- Eduardas Rozentalis, Lithuanian grandmaster
- Levy Rozman, American international master, chess YouTuber, commentator, teacher
- Akiba Rubinstein, Polish grandmaster
- Gersz Salwe, Polish grandmaster
- Jennifer Shahade, American chess player, poker player, commentator and writer
- Leonid Shamkovich, Soviet/Israeli/Canadian/American grandmaster
- Yury Shulman, Belarusian/Soviet/American grandmaster
- Gennady Sosonko, Russian-born Dutch grandmaster
- Jon Speelman, English grandmaster
- Rudolf Spielmann, Austrian-born Swedish
- Leonid Stein, Ukrainian-born Russian grandmaster
- Endre Steiner, Hungarian, killed by the Nazis
- Lajos Steiner, Romanian/Hungarian-born Australian
- Wilhelm Steinitz, Czech-born Austrian and US grandmaster and 1st undisputed world champion
- Mark Stolberg, Russian
- Emil Sutovsky, Israeli grandmaster
- Peter Svidler, Russian grandmaster, World Cup champion
- László Szabó, Hungarian grandmaster
- Mark Taimanov, Soviet/Russian grandmaster
- Mikhail Tal, Soviet/Latvian grandmaster and 8th undisputed world champion
- Siegbert Tarrasch, Polish/German grandmaster and Senior World champion
- Savielly Tartakower, Russian-born Austrian/Polish/French grandmaster
- Anna Ushenina, Ukraine-born Women's World Champion
- Anatoly Vaisser, Kazakh-born Soviet/French grandmaster
- Joshua Waitzkin, American Junior Champion and martial arts champion
- Max Weiss, Slovakian/Hungarian-born Austrian
- Simon Winawer, Polish
- Patrick Wolff,, American grandmaster and twice US champion
- Leonid Yudasin, Russian-born Israeli grandmaster
- Tatiana Zatulovskaya, Azerbaijani-born Russian Israeli woman grandmaster
- Johannes Zukertort, Polish-born German English master who lost a match to Steinitz for the world championship