HomeNewsWorldWhy does white always go first in chess?

Why does white always go first in chess?

Socially speaking, an ideal solution would be to give both colours a 50 percent chance to move first. That is the way it was in shatranj, a precursor to modern-day chess.

July 18, 2020 / 07:34 IST
Story continues below Advertisement
Image courtesy: (Carlos Esteves on Unsplash)
Image courtesy: (Carlos Esteves on Unsplash)

The recent protests over racism have rekindled a longstanding discussion about whether chess promotes white privilege with its rule that the first move always goes to the player with the white pieces. In this Q&A, Daaim Shabazz, an international business professor and chess journalist, offers insight into whether there’s any merit to the idea that the rule is meant to uphold white privilege.

Who decided that white should always go first?

Story continues below Advertisement

Johann Löwenthal, a British master, put forth one of the first proposals of record to give white the obligatory first move. At the First American Chess Congress, held in New York in 1857, Löwenthal sent two letters to the secretary of the New York Chess Club, Frederick Perrin.

On page 84 of the congress’s proceedings, it refers to one of the letters by citing “the advisableness of always giving the first move, in published games, to the player of the white pieces…” This rule was not immediately adopted, and tournament organisers maintained flexibility on the first move. In the Fifth American Chess Congress in 1880, it was written on page 164 of the Code of Chess Laws, “The right of first move must be determined by lot. The player must always play with the white men.”