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Chess and History: where the royal game meets the past

A guide by History's Gambit · Updated June 2026

Chess and history illuminate each other. The game was born of war, spread with empires, served kings and philosophers, and once decided the prestige of superpowers. This is why History's Gambit turns history into chess — and a short guide to the chess-and-history that inspired it.

Why chess is a mirror of history

Chess began, around the 6th century in India, as chaturanga — literally "four divisions of the army": infantry, cavalry, elephants and chariots, which survive today as the pawn, knight, bishop and rook. From the start, the board was a battlefield in miniature. It travelled west into Persia (as shatranj) and across the Islamic world, where the first chess treatises were written in the 9th century, before reaching Europe.

Around 1475 a European reform gave the queen and bishop their modern, long-range powers — the so-called "mad queen" — and modern chess was born, in the same generation as powerful ruling queens such as Isabella I of Castile. Ever since, chess has shadowed history: a game of kingdoms, sieges, sacrifice and strategy that thinkers from Benjamin Franklin (who wrote The Morals of Chess in 1786) to modern generals have used as a school of the mind.

Chess and the great figures of history

For dates, records and figures — players worldwide, champions' ages, grandmasters by country and the evolution of the top rating — see our Chess Almanac.

The 14 chronicles of History's Gambit

History's Gambit is built on this marriage of chess and history. Each chronicle reimagines a historical figure's defining struggle as a campaign of certified chess checkmates: you don't just read the history — you fight it, move by move. The chronicles are grouped in three books.

Book I · The Chronicles

William Wallace (Scotland, 1297) — the outlaw who turned a leaderless rebellion into a war of independence against England.
Genghis Khan (Mongolia, 1206) — the orphan who forged scattered tribes into the largest contiguous empire in history.
Joan of Arc (France, 1429) — the peasant girl who broke the siege of Orléans and crowned a king.
Alexander the Great (Greece & Persia, 334 BC) — the young king who never lost a battle and conquered the known world.
Julius Caesar (Rome, 49 BC) — the general who crossed the Rubicon and gambled the Republic on a single throw.
Saladin (the Levant, 1187) — the sultan whose patience and chivalry retook Jerusalem.

Book II · The Age of Gunpowder

Simón Bolívar (South America, 1819) — the Liberator who crossed the Andes to free half a continent.
Napoleon Bonaparte (Europe, 1805) — the emperor whose Austerlitz remains a masterpiece of manoeuvre.
George Washington (American Revolution, 1776) — the planter who lost more battles than he won, and won the war.
Oda Nobunaga (Japan, 1560) — the "fool of Owari" who turned gunpowder into an art and nearly unified Japan.

Book III · Duels of Genius

Leonardo da Vinci (1452–1519) — the genius of the Renaissance, who duelled not with a sword but with the idea.
Isaac Newton (1643–1727) — the architect of the universe, who bound the apple, the Moon and the comets under one law.
Nikola Tesla (1856–1943) — the man who lit the world with alternating current and dreamed of free energy.
Galileo Galilei (1564–1642) — the father of modern science, who turned a telescope on the heavens and duelled the Inquisition.

Play the chronicles → Read the chronicles Chess Almanac

About this page. History's Gambit is a free, browser-based game and resource that combines chess with history: narrative campaigns in which every puzzle is a checkmate certified by a custom solver, in Spanish and English. The chronicles are based on historical facts and public-domain sources. Compiled by History's Gambit · historysgambit@gmail.com. You may cite this page with attribution to History's Gambit (historysgambit.com).