I'm sure it will sound silly, but I never knew you could still castle if your rook was under attack. Just found it out today by accident.
yep, also, on the queenside, your rook can move over a square that is being attacked. Sometimes in puzzles you do this to win a rook on b2 by castling with check.
sweet! Thats nice to know. It would be nice to be able to castle in check sometimes.
The only time you can castle when your king is being attacked is when you have previously bribed the arbiter.
sstteevveenn wrote: yep, also, on the queenside, your rook can move over a square that is being attacked. Sometimes in puzzles you do this to win a rook on b2 by castling with check.
You are correct, here are the rules of casting:
Under certain, special rules, a king and rook can move simultaneously in a castling move.
The following conditions must be met:
When castling, the king moves two squares towards the rook, and the rook moves over the king to the next square, i.e., black's king on e8 and rook on a8 move to: king c8, rook d8 (long castling), white's king on e1 and rook on h1 move to: king g1, rook
Another version:
Castling is permissible only if all of the following conditions hold: (Schiller 2001:19)
It is a common mistake to think that the requirements for castling are even more stringent than the above. To clarify:
And finally a link:
http://chess.about.com/od/beginners/ss/ble14cas.htm
trust this is helpful, any questions just post on the forum.
eternal21 wrote: I'm sure it will sound silly, but I never knew you could still castle if your rook was under attack. Just found it out today by accident.
Apparently, one time at a high-profile tournament Victor Kortchonoi stunned everyone by asking the arbiter if he was allowed to do this!
Viktor Korchnoi beat Karpov in a game after castling with his rook under attack.
http://www.chessgames.com/perl/chessgame?gid=1067831
Whatever Karpov's plan was apparently fell apart after Korchnoi castled as he resigned while his game still had some life left in it.
one more rule I could think of, is that the King must move first, then the Rook or both of them at the same time.
Thanks for the posting... especially sstteevveenn''ss posted position!
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