Princess (chess)

A common icon for the princess in diagrams

A princess is a fairy chess piece that can move like a bishop or a knight. It cannot jump over other pieces when moving as a bishop, but may do so when moving as a knight. The piece has acquired many names and is frequently called archbishop or cardinal;[lower-alpha 1] it may also be called simply the bishop+knight compound. Chess moves in this article use NB as notation for the princess.

Movement

The princess can move as a bishop or a knight.

abcdefgh
8
a8 black cross
b7 black cross
c6 black cross
d6 black circle
f6 black circle
g6 white pawn
c5 black circle
d5 black cross
e5 white pawn
f5 black cross
g5 black circle
e4 white archbishop
f4 white pawn
c3 black circle
d3 black cross
f3 black cross
g3 black circle
c2 black pawn
d2 black circle
f2 black circle
g2 black cross
h1 black cross
8
77
66
55
44
33
22
11
abcdefgh
The princess can move but not jump to squares with crosses, or capture the pawn on c2. It can jump to squares with circles.
abcdefgh
8
a8 black cross
b7 black cross
h7 black cross
c6 black cross
d6 black circle
f6 black circle
g6 black cross
c5 black circle
d5 black cross
f5 black cross
g5 black circle
e4 white archbishop
c3 black circle
d3 black cross
f3 black cross
g3 black circle
c2 black cross
d2 black circle
f2 black circle
g2 black cross
b1 black cross
h1 black cross
8
77
66
55
44
33
22
11
abcdefgh
Maximum range of a princess on an empty board

History and nomenclature

Staunton-style princess ("archbishop") pieces. Many other designs have been used, varying with the name used for the piece in each variant.

The princess is one of the most simply described fairy chess pieces and as such has a long history and has gone by many names. A generic name would be the bishop+knight compound. The name archbishop was introduced by José Raúl Capablanca in his large variant Capablanca Chess. He originally called it the chancellor, but later changed the names and the rook+knight compound became known as the chancellor. Both of these names refer to higher ranks than the bishop in the Roman Catholic Church, but archbishop does so more obviously to most people, and thus became more popular. In fact, the name archbishop has been used for other augmented bishops as well, such as the "reflecting bishop" (which reflects off the sides of the board) and the bishop+king compound. A similar approach was taken by Christian Freeling, the inventor of Grand Chess, who named it the cardinal. Both archbishop and cardinal are popular names for the bishop+knight compound.

The name princess is more widely used among problemists. By analogy with the queen, which is a rook+bishop compound, it was decided that the three basic combinations of the three simple chess pieces (rook, knight, and bishop) should all be named after female royalty. Since the bishop+knight compound seemed to be obviously weaker than the rook+knight compound (as the bishop is weaker than the rook), the name princess was used for the bishop+knight compound and the rook+knight compound was called the empress. However, the bishop+knight compound can checkmate a lone king all by itself if the opposing player blunders by putting his king on a corner square where the princess can checkmate it two squares away diagonally, while the rook+knight compound cannot checkmate a lone king by itself.

The princess was first used in Turkish Great Chess, a large medieval variant of chess, where it was called the vizir (not to be confused with the piece more commonly referred to as the wazir today, which is the (1,0) leaper). It was introduced in the West with Carrera's chess, a chess variant from 1617, where it was called a centaur, and has been used in many chess variants since then.

Value

abcdefgh
8
g8 black king
c6 white archbishop
g6 white king
8
77
66
55
44
33
22
11
abcdefgh
White to move can force mate in two with 1.(NB)e7+ Kh8 2.(NB)f6#

Ralph Betza (inventor of chess with different armies, in which the princess was used in one of the armies) rated the princess as about seven points, intermediate between a rook and a queen, noting that it was "a weak Queen" and that its value was increased by its 12 different directions of movement versus 8 directions for queen. However, all three of his alternate armies for that game are actually stronger than the standard FIDE army which they were supposed to equal, reflecting the general tendency for players to undervalue pieces which they are unfamiliar with; Larry Kaufman commented that this is particularly true for the princess, which is significantly more valuable than most players predict.

Computer self-play studies show that a single pawn is enough to compensate the difference between queen and princess on an 8×8 board, and that on 10×8 boards princess plus pawn even have a light advantage over queen. This implies that the princess is worth approximately eight pawns. This appears somewhat surprising, as the value difference of the non-bishop-components (rook vs. knight) is closer to two pawns, implying an unusually large synergy between the bishop and knight move. Although princess versus rook is usually a draw, so is queen versus princess. King and princess versus king is a forced win for the side with the princess; checkmate can be forced within 17 moves. In comparison, the queen requires 10 moves and the rook requires 16. Despite this, a princess can checkmate a lone king while the king is the corner and the princess is two spaces diagonally away from it but it can not be forced.

See also

  • Amazon—the rook+bishop+knight compound
  • Empress—the rook+knight compound
  • Queen—the rook+bishop compound

Notes

  1. Less common names the piece has acquired include adjutant, aircraft, centaur, chancellor, davidson, deacon, equerry, fox, horseman, janus, monk, pilot, police chief, prime minister, rhino, squire, superbishop, templar, wazir, and zek.[1]

References

  1. Pritchard, D. B. (1994), "Pieces", The Encyclopedia of Chess Variants, Games & Puzzles Publications, p. 227, ISBN 0-9524142-0-1

Bibliography

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