Alfrēds Hartmanis

Alfrēds Hartmanis (November 1, 1881 in Riga, Latvia – July 27, 1927 in Riga, Latvia) was a Latvian chess player who won the Baltic Chess Congress in 1913.

Alfrēds Hartmanis
CountryRussia
Latvia
Born(1881-11-01)November 1, 1881
Lutriņi parish, Courland Governorate, Russian Empire (now Latvia)
DiedJuly 27, 1927(1927-07-27) (aged 45)
Riga, Latvia

Chess career

In 1900 Hartmanis became the Riga chess club member. In 1910 he participated in strong chess tournament in Warsaw and scored 9/15, with Akiba Rubinstein winning.[1] In 1912 the All-Russian Masters Tournament in Vilno Hartmanis scored 10½/19.[2]

In 1913 Hartmanis enjoyed the greatest success in his chess player career, with 11½/14 winning the VI Baltic Chess Congress in Mitau. After the World War I actively engaged in Latvian chess life's recovery, achieving good results in tournaments. In 1924 he participated in first Latvian Chess Championship and finished fourth behind Hermanis Matisons, Fricis Apšenieks and Kārlis Bētiņš. In 1926 in second Latvian Chess Championship Hartmanis placed fifth behind Apšenieks, Teodors Bergs, Vladimirs Petrovs and Augusts Strautmanis.

For many years Hartmanis worked as a tutor, but in 1920s few years served as a tax official.

gollark: In my experience VPSes don't really offer reasonably priced high-capacity HDD storage.
gollark: (not that I actually have offsite backups, which I should... probably do something about?)
gollark: Offsite backup, and automated backup, is generally a good idea.
gollark: Given that they can't practically have people look over each individual video as it's posted, I wouldn't be surprised if it's some magic inscrutable "AI" thing.
gollark: It's kind of sad that the sort of videos people make is shaped a lot by the whims of some magic ad-revenue-optimization algorithm.

References

  • Alfrēds Hartmanis player profile at chess-db.com
  • An obituary in the newspaper «Latvis», 05.08.1927 (in Latvian).
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.