Friedl cattle
Friedl Rinder, Dahn 1959 |
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Surname | Frieda Rinder |
Association | Germany |
Born | November 20, 1905 Schrobenhausen |
Died | June 3, 2001 Munich |
title | International Women's Champion (1957) |
Frieda "Friedl" (incorrectly also: Elfriede) Rinder , geb. Benzinger (born November 20, 1905 in Schrobenhausen , † June 3, 2001 in Munich ) was a German chess player .
She was five times German women's champion and reached fourth place in the 1939 World Chess Championship for women . Rinder was a niece of the strong chess player Josef Benzinger . This taught them the game of chess. You first heard of her in 1932, when she came third at the 13th Congress of the Bavarian Chess Federation .
German women's championships
In 1939 she won the German women's championship for the first time in Stuttgart . She succeeded four more times, namely in 1949 at the all-German championship in Munich , 1955 in Krefeld , 1956 in Wolfratshausen and 1959 in Dahn .
She was runner-up in 1947 in Seesen , 1951 in Bad Klosterlausnitz and 1953 Waldkirch . Her chess club was the women's chess club in Munich .
Women's World Championship
In 1939 she took part in the 9th Women's World Championship in Buenos Aires . She scored 15 points and was fourth among the twenty participants behind Vera Menchik , Sonja Graf and Berna Carrasco . In 1959 and 1961, she took part in candidate tournaments twice.
further activities
Rinder won several international women's tournaments. She played three times at a chess Olympiad for Germany's women's team on the first board, namely at the 1957 Chess Olympiad in Emmen , 1963 in Split and 1966 in Oberhausen .
In 1957 she was awarded the title of International Champion by the World Chess Federation FIDE .
Private
Her son Gerd Rinder also became a well-known chess player: German youth champion in 1954, master of Bavaria in 1960 and study composer. Her daughter was Elfriede Oweger, also a chess player (6th place at the German championship in 1968).
Individual evidence
- ↑ Her first name according to the birth certificate is Frieda.
- ^ German women's championship 1939 in Stuttgart on TeleSchess
- ^ German championships of women an overview of the German championships since 1939, compiled by Gerhard Hund
- ^ German women's championship 1959 in Dahn on TeleSchess
- ^ Alfred Diel : Chess in Germany. Festival book on the occasion of the 100th anniversary of the Deutscher Schachbund e. V. 1877-1977. Rau, Düsseldorf 1977, p. 167.
- ↑ Cross table of the Women's World Cup 1939 (English)
- ↑ World Chess Championship (Women) 1959 Candidates Tournament
- ↑ World Chess Championship (Women) 1961 Candidates Tournament
- ↑ Friedl Rinders results at the women's chess Olympiads on olimpbase.org (English)
- ^ Willy Iclicki: FIDE Golden book 1924-2002 . Euroadria, Slovenia, 2002, p. 116.
- ^ German individual youth championships 1954
- ↑ Süddeutsche Schachzeitung 1960, p. 181.
- ↑ 20th German women's championship 1968 in Fürstenfeldbruck on TeleSchach (cross table and picture)
Web links
- Playable chess games by Friedl Rinder on 365Chess.com (English)
personal data | |
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SURNAME | Cattle, Friedl |
ALTERNATIVE NAMES | Benzinger, Frieda (maiden name); Cattle, Frieda; Rinder, Elfriede (frequent misspellings) |
BRIEF DESCRIPTION | German chess player |
DATE OF BIRTH | November 20, 1905 |
PLACE OF BIRTH | Schrobenhausen |
DATE OF DEATH | June 3, 2001 |
Place of death | Munich |