Paris City Chess Championship
The first Paris City Chess Championship was held in 1925.[1][2][3] Since 1989 the title of Paris Champion has been awarded to the highest-placed French player licensed in Île-de-France for the current and previous season.[4]
# Year Winner 1 1925 Abraham Baratz
Vitaly Halberstadt2 1926 Leon Schwartzmann 3 1927 Abraham Baratz 4 1928 Abraham Baratz 5 1929 Tihomil Drezga 6 1930 Josef Cukierman 7 1931 Eugene Znosko-Borovsky 8 1932 Oscar Blum 9 1933 Alexander Alekhine 10 1934 Nicolas Rossolimo 11 1935 Léon Monosson 12 1936 Nicolas Rossolimo 13 1937 Nicolas Rossolimo 14 1938 Maurice Raizman 1939–40 not held 1941 unknown[5] 18 1942 Robert Crépeaux 19 1943 Constant Schoen 20 1944 César Boutteville 21 1945 César Boutteville 22 1946 César Boutteville 23 1947 Nicolas Rossolimo 24 1948 Nicolas Rossolimo 25 1949 Nicolas Rossolimo 26 1950 Jacques Planté 27 1951 Stepan Popel 28 1952 César Boutteville 29 1953 Stepan Popel 30 1954 Stepan Popel 31 1955 Pierre Rolland 32 1956 Borko Simonovic 33 1957 Jacques Ratner 34 1958 Guy Mazzoni 35 1959 Gérard Linais 36 1961 César Boutteville 37 1962 François Molnar 38 1963 François Molnar 39 1964 François Molnar 40 1965 Bogdan Ducic 41 1966 Miodrag Todorcevic 42 1967 Miodrag Todorcevic 43 1968 Claude Jean 44 1969 Bernard Huguet 45 1970 Kristian Cormier 46 1971 Alexanadar Obradovic 47 1972 César Boutteville 48 1973 Miodrag Todorcevic 49 1974 Miodrag Todorcevic 50 1975 Jacques Maclès 51 1976 Miodrag Todorcevic 52 1977 Georges Noradounghian 53 1978 Christian Lécuyer 54 1979 Alain Villeneuve 55 1980 Israel Zilber (off contest)
Nicolas Giffard56 1981 Didier Sellos 57 1982 Éric Prié 58 1983 Éric Prié 59 1984 Olivier Renet 60 1985 Slim Belkhodja 61 1986 Nabil Doghri 62 1987 Jacques Maclès 63 1988 Didier Sellos 64 1989 Christophe Bernard 65 1990 Manuel Apicella 66 1991 Jacques Elbilia 67 1992 Éric Prié 68 1993 Laurent Vérat 69 1994 Jacques Demarre 70 1995 Olivier Renet 71 1996 Éric Prié 72 1997 Éloi Relange 73 1998 Éloi Relange 74 1999 Ashot Anastasian (off contest)
Éloi Relange75 2000 Stanislav Savchenko (off contest)
Joël Lautier76 2001 Christian Bauer (off contest)
Luc Bergèz77 2002 Yochanan Afek (off contest)
Laurent Fressinet78 2003 Alberto David[6] (off contest)
Thal Abergel79 2004 Jean-Marc Degraeve 80 2005 Alberto David[7] (off contest)
Laurent Fressinet81 2006 Murtas Kazhgaleyev[8] (off contest)
Daniel Fridman82 2007 Maxime Vachier-Lagrave[9] 83 2008 Maxime Vachier-Lagrave[10] 84 2009 Murtas Kazhgaleyev[11][8] (off contest)
Sergey Fedorchuk85 2010 Sebastien Feller[12] 86 2011 Arun Prasad (off contest)
Sergey Fedorchuk87 2012 Sergey Fedorchuk 88 2013 Adrien Demuth[13] 89 2014 Sergey Fedorchuk 90 2015 S.P. Sethuraman (off contest)
Olivier Renet91 2016 Jules Moussard 92 2017 Bilel Bellahcene[14] 93 2018 Jules Moussard 94 2019 Jules Moussard
References
- "Champions de Paris". Pagesperso-orange.fr. Retrieved 2012-03-17.
- "Champ Paris". Heritageechecsfra.free.fr. Retrieved 2012-03-17.
- "Campeonato de París". Ajedrezdeataque.com. Retrieved 2012-03-17.
- "PALMARES DES CHAMPIONS DE PARIS" (PDF). Ligue d'Île-de-France des Échecs. Retrieved 21 November 2016.
- "Championnat de Paris 1941". Retrieved 21 November 2016.
- "modele". Idf-echecs.com. Retrieved 2012-03-17.
- Crowther, Mark (2005-07-25). "The Week in Chess 559: Paris Championship". London Chess Center. Retrieved 2019-10-27.
- "Murtas Kazhgaleyev wins Ile-de-France Paris Championship". ChessBase. Retrieved 2012-03-17.
- "ChIP Fide - Classement après la ronde 9". Idf-echecs.com. Retrieved 2012-03-17.
- Crowther, Mark (2008-07-07). "The Week in Chess 713: International Championship of Paris". London Chess Centre. Retrieved 2019-10-27.
- Crowther, Mark (2009-07-20). "The Week in Chess 767: International Open Championship of Paris". London Chess Centre. Retrieved 2019-10-27.
- Crowther, Mark (2010-07-19). "The Week in Chess 819: Championnat International de Paris 2010". London Chess Centre. Retrieved 2019-10-27.
- "Adrien Demuth first at the 88th Paris Chess Championship". Chessdom. 2013-07-16. Retrieved 2019-10-27.
- "92ème championnat de Paris 2017 Bilel Bellahcène l'emporte en solo". Ligue Idf des echecs (in French). 2017-07-14. Retrieved 2019-10-27.
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