.Milan Vidmar by Bill Wall
Milan Vidmar was born on June 22,
1885 in Laibach (
In 1895, his brother Josip
(1895-1992) was born. He became a
politician, literary critic, essayist, and translator. Before World War II, he was the artistic
director of the Slovenian National Theater.
From 1943 to 1944, he was the Chairman of the Yugoslav Liberation
Front. From 1944 to 1953, he was the
President of the Presidium of Yugoslavia (
He learned chess in 1900 at the age of 15 from his father.
His first serious chess opponent was Frano
Poljanec, a school friend of his. Vidmar then met a
real master, Hebrik Pfeiffer, who was living in
Vidmar became an amateur chess player in 1901and remained an amateur player the rest of his life.
In 1902, Vidmar played Poljanec in a match, but lost with 2 wins, 5 losses, and 1 draw.
In 1902, he began studying mechanical engineering in
During his stay in
In the autumn of 1902, Vidmar was recommended to compete in the Wiener Schachklub championship. But Vidmar had to pay the membership fee of 40 crowns. Vidmar obtained a loan from his university colleagues to play in the event. Vidmar was expected to pay the loan back after winning a prize. The tournament lasted several months. Vidmar ended in 6th place and was able to pay his loan back.
He was a professor at the
He took 4th-5th in the Vienna Chess Club Amateur tournament in 1903.
In 1904, at the age of 19, he tied for 1st with Augustin Neumann in the 14th German Chess Federation
championship in
In 1904-05, he took last place in the Vienna King’s Gambit tournament (won by Schlechter).
He tied for 3rd-4th at Barmen in 1905, behind Duras and Rubinstein.
He took 7th-9th at
In 1906, his chess teacher, Tarrasch,
encouraged Vidmar to play at
In 1906, he took 9th-11th in the 15th German Chess
Federation championship in
He defeated Tartakower in 1906 in match play (+4 =3 -2).
He graduated in 1907 at the
In 1907, he took 3rd-5th at
He took 5th at Karlsbad (
He took 3rd at
In 1909, he tied for 15th-16th place at
His first notable win (won 6, drew 2, lost 1) was at
On December 16, 1909, he son Milan Vidmar, Jr (1909-1980) was born. He was an electrical engineer and an International Master.
In 1910, he competed in no chess tournaments.
In 1911, Vidmar tied for 2nd (+5
=8 -1) at
In 1911, he tied for 6th-7th at Karlsbad. There were 25 players.
In 1911, he got his Ph.D. degree in elctro-engineering
from the Technical faculty in
From 1910 through 1935, he was among the world top 10 chess players.
In 1912, he published his only chess tournament book,
He took 1st at
In 1913, he tied for 8th-9th at
In 1913, he left
In 1914, he was in 2nd place, behind Alekhine, at Mannheim (the 19th German Chess Federation Championship), when the tournament was stopped in the 11th round of 17 rounds, due to the First World War. At the time, Vidmar was undfeated and had met stronger opposition. He had 8.5 points (6 wins and 5 draws) and Alekhine had 9.5 points.
World War I found Vidmar in
He took 1st at
In 1918, Vidmar played a few
off-hand games with Sammy Reshevsky, who was living
in
He won at
In 1918, he took 2nd place at Kaschau
(
He defeated Tartakower in 1918 in a match (+2 =4 -0).
Around 1919, he was given the academic title of a Dozent and began to lecture at the Polytechnic in
When the university was founded in
In 1921, he served as Chairman of the Yugoslav Chess Federation.
He took 3rd at
He tied for 1st at
He took 3rd at Semmering in 1926 (+9 =6 -2), behind Spielmann and Alekhine, ahead of Nimzovich and Rubinstein.
He took 4th at
He took 4th at
He took 2nd at
He took 5th at Karlsbad in 1929, scoring 12-9. The event was won by Nimzovich.
Between 1928 and 1929, he was the 10th Chancellor of the
At Bled in 1931, he scored 13.5-12.5, sharing 4th place.
He competed in the Chess Olympiads of 1931 (
In 1932, he tied for 1st at Bad Sliac (+6 =7) with Flohr, ahead of Bogoljubow.
In 1934, he published the textbook Sah.
In 1935, he took 8th place in
In 1935, at the chess olympiad
in
In 1936, he took 8th at Nauheim.
Vidmar was scheduled to play Capablanca in the 10th round of the 1936 Nottingham Tournament. The game was postponed because Vidmar became ill. The game was set for the next free day, before the 14th round. The other competitors, however, insisted that the game be played before the start of the 11th round. Capablanca refused to cooperate, saying, “I did a favor for a colleague when he was ill. Surely Vidmar can understand that it is our of the question for me to cancel a date with a lady.”
Vidmar took 9th place at
In 1936, he defeated Reshevsky in a match at the Marshall Chess Club, but it was not a formal match. It was merely a series of 6 quick games (+3 =1 -2).
In 1936/37, he took 4th-5th at
In 1936-37, he won a strong correspondence tournament. He took up correspondence chess because of health problems. He was overweight and a heavy smoker.
In 1938, he took 5th-7th at
In 1939, he took 3rd-6th at
In 1939, he took 1st at Agram.
In 1939, he was Yugoslav Champion. It was the strongest Yugoslav championship up to that time.
In 1940, he took 2nd at
During World War II, the invading Nazis and the Italian fascists left him alone. The respected him for his engineering work and his chess.
In 1945, Milan Vidmar and his son
tied for 2nd place at
He played at
In 1946, he wrote Dialogue with a Beginner.
He devoted himself to his academic and electrical
engineering career, becoming Dean at
Capablanca said “I am lucky that Vidmar is torn between engineering and chess; otherwise my title would be seriously threatened.”
He became the chief referee at the Hague/Moscow 1948 Match-Tournament to select a new World Champion.
In 1948, he founded the national electrical engineering
institute in
In 1950, he was awarded the International Grandmaster (GM)
title. He was
In 1950, he took 9th-13th at Bled.
In 1950, his son played in the Chess Olympiad. Vidmar senior was the senior arbiter.
In 1951, he was awarded the International Arbiter title.
In 1951, he wrote his autobiograhy Pol Stoletja Ob Sahovnici (Half Century at the Chessboard).
In 1952, he took 1st at
His final appearance in an international tournament was at Opatia (Opatija) in 1953. He took last place.
In 1961, he wrote Goldene Scachzeiten, a book of chess reminiscences.
In 1961, at the age of 76, he was the chief arbiter at Bled.
He passed away in
He wrote 35 books on engineering. For many years, he was chess editor of the Yugoslav newspaper Jutro.
He was married twice and had two sets of children.
The Slovene Chess Federation organizes an international
tournament called the Milan Vidmar memorial. The first was held in
.