Gundula Heinatz
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Gundula Heinatz in the women's Bundesliga 2011/12 |
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Born | May 12, 1969 Halle (Saale) , German Democratic Republic |
title | International Women's Champion (1993) |
Current Elo rating | 2131 (January 2020) |
Best Elo rating | 2277 (July 2005 to April 2006) |
Tab at the FIDE (English) |
Gundula Heinatz (born Gundula Nehse on May 12, 1969 in Halle (Saale) ) is a chess player with German citizenship who lives and works in Switzerland . She has been playing for the Swiss women's chess team since 2002. In 1993 she received the title of International Champion (WIM) from FIDE .
Life
Gundula Heinatz grew up as Gundula Nehse in the GDR . She learned to play chess from her father. The right training began at the BSG Chemie IW Ilmenau section chess. She went down in German chess history as Gundula Nehse in Bad Blankenburg in 1990 as the last GDR champion.
She moved to Switzerland and works as a doctor of information technology specialist for the Swiss Mobiliar Insurance Company . The title of her dissertation at the TU Dresden was Communication Patterns and their Application in the Information Landscape .
Her daughter Maria is also a powerful chess player. At the 2015 Mitropapokal , mother and daughter were together in the Swiss women's team.
chess
As a girl, she won the U18 individual youth championship for women in Ilmenau in the GDR.
Tournaments (selection)
She played at the following women's individual championships in the GDR: 1987 in Glauchau (4th place), 1988 in Stralsund (5th place), 1989 in Zittau (4th place), 1990 in Bad Blankenburg (1st place).
This was followed by women's tournaments in Dresden in 1990 (shared second behind Zoya Lelchuk ), the Ingrid Larsen memorial tournament in Farum 1991 (third, Eliška Richtrová was first), a women's tournament in Dresden in 1992 (shared second, Margarita Wojska won), the Farum Open 1993 (shared Third, first was Eliška Richtrová).
At the German individual championship for women in 1993 in Bad Mergentheim , she was fourth behind Marina Olbrich , Anke Koglin and Isabel Hund .
This was followed by women's zone tournaments in 1993 in Graz , 1995 in Ptuj and 1998 in Dresden.
After moving to Switzerland, she finished second behind Tatjana Lematschko at the Swiss women's championship in 2002 in Leukerbad .
In 2014 and 2018, Heinatz won the Swiss women's championship .
National team
Gundula Heinatz took part in the 1992 Chess Olympiad in Manila with the German women's selection.
She has played with the Swiss women's team at all seven Chess Olympiads since the 2002 Chess Olympiad in Bled .
At team European Championships women she took in 1992 with Germany, and in 2007, 2011 and 2013, with Switzerland in part, while in 2007 reached the second highest individual score on the third board.
societies
Gundula Heinatz played in the 1st German Women's Chess League from 1991 to 1999 for the Dresdner SC (until 1994 Post SV Dresden ), with whom she won the championship in 1995 , and from 2002 to 2013 and again since 2015 for the Karlsruher Schachfreunde , whom she continued to belong in the meantime after relegation to the 2nd Bundesliga.
In Switzerland, it is the club SK Trubschachen , with them in the 2014 season in the National League A (chess) plays in the Swiss 1. Bundesliga she had in the 2006/07 season use at NN Bern .
Web links
- DWZ index card from Gundula Heinatz on the German Chess Federation
- Replayable chess games by Gundula Nehse on 365Chess.com (English)
- Replayable chess games by Gundula Heinatz on 365Chess.com (English)
- Literature by and about Gundula Heinatz in the catalog of the German National Library
Individual evidence
- ↑ Ralf Thürsam: Gundula Heinatz lives in Switzerland and starts in the women's Bundesliga for Karlsruhe ( Memento from August 4, 2012 in the web archive archive.today ) Märkische Allgemeine, December 28, 2011
- ^ Willy Iclicki: FIDE Golden book 1924-2002. Euroadria, Slovenia, 2002, p. 120
- ↑ Dissertation - DR. GUNDULA HEINATZ ( Memento from August 4, 2016 in the Internet Archive ) at Technische Universität Dresden
- ↑ 36th German women's championship of the GDR 1987 in Glauchau on TeleSchach
- ↑ 37th German women's championship of the GDR 1988 in Stralsund on TeleSchess
- ↑ 38th German women's championship of the GDR 1988 in Zittau on TeleSchess
- ↑ 39th German women's championship of the GDR 1990 in Blankenburg on TeleSchess
- ↑ Dresden (women) 1990 on 365Chess (English)
- ↑ Ingrid Larsen mem (Women) Farum 1991 on 365Chess (English)
- ↑ Dresden (Women) Dresden 1992 on 365Chess (English)
- ↑ Farum op (Women) Farum 1993 on 365Chess (English)
- ↑ 32nd German Women's Championship 1993 in Bad Mergentheim on TeleSchach
- ↑ SUI-ch (Women) Leukerbad 2002 on 365Chess (English)
- ↑ Gundula Heinatz 'results at the women's chess Olympiads on olimpbase.org (English)
- ↑ Results of the Swiss team at the 2014 Women's Chess Olympiad on chess-results.com
- ↑ Gundula Heinatz 'results at the European Women's Team Championships on olimpbase.org (English)
personal data | |
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SURNAME | Heinatz, Gundula |
ALTERNATIVE NAMES | Nehse, Gundula (maiden name) |
BRIEF DESCRIPTION | German-Swiss chess player |
DATE OF BIRTH | May 12, 1969 |
PLACE OF BIRTH | Halle (Saale) |