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Klaus Junge

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Klaus Junge
Klaus Junge, 1942, wearing the uniform of the Reichsarbeitsdienst with the swastika armband as a part of the uniform[1]
Full nameKlaus Junge
CountryGermany
Born(1924-01-01)1 January 1924
Concepción, Chile
Died17 April 1945(1945-04-17) (aged 21)
Welle, Germany

Klaus Junge (1 January 1924 – 17 April 1945) was one of the youngest Chilean-German chess masters. In several tournaments during the 1940s he held his own among the world's leading players. An officer in the Wehrmacht, he died during the Battle of Welle shortly before the end of World War II.

Biography

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Junge was born into a German Chilean family. His father Otto was a strong chess player who won the Chilean Chess Championship in 1922. In 1928 his parents and their five sons returned to Germany.

On 11–20 August 1939, he, along with Wolfgang Unzicker (14 years old), Edith Keller (17), Rudolf Kunath (15) and Karl Krbavic (17), played in Fürstenwalde (Jugendschachwoche) near Berlin.[2] In 1941, at the age of 17, Klaus Junge was considered one of the strongest players in Germany. In 1941, he won the championship of Hamburg. In May 1941, he won at Bad Elster (qualifying German championship). In August 1941, he tied for first with Paul Felix Schmidt at Bad Oeynhausen (the eighth German Championship), although he lost a playoff match against Schmidt for the title at Bromberg (+0 –3 =1). In October 1941, he took fourth place, behind Alexander Alekhine, Schmidt, and Efim Bogoljubow, at Kraków/Warsaw (the second General Government chess tournament championship).[3]

In January 1942, Junge won the Dresden tournament. In 1942, he took second place, behind Walter Niephaus, at Leipzig. In April 1942, he was second, behind Carl Carls, at Rostock. In June 1942, he tied for third–fourth with Schmidt, behind Alekhine and Paul Keres, at the Salzburg 1942 chess tournament. In September, he took seventh place at the Munich (the first European Championship), won by Alekhine. In October 1942, he took second place, behind Alekhine, at Warsaw/Lublin/Kraków (the third General Government championship). In December 1942, he tied for first with Alekhine at Prague (Duras Jubileé, 60-jährigen Jubiläum).[4] In 1942–43, he played in three correspondence tournaments, beating among others Rudolf Teschner and Emil Joseph Diemer.

World War II cut Junge's chess career short. Klaus Junge, whose father had been a member of the Nazi Party since 1932,[5] was an adherent of the National Socialist ideology. As a lieutenant of the Wehrmacht, he died in combat against Allied troops on 17 April 1945 in the Battle of Welle on the Lüneburg Heath, close to Hamburg, three weeks before World War II ended.[6]

In 1946, Regensburg hosted the first Klaus Junge Memorial. The event was won by Fedor Bohatirchuk, ahead of Elmārs Zemgalis, Wolfgang Unzicker, etc.[7]

Notable games

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World Champion Alekhine (age 49) vs. Klaus Junge (age 18), Salzburg 1942
abcdefgh
8
f8 black rook
g8 black king
f7 black pawn
g7 black pawn
h7 black pawn
f6 black bishop
b5 white pawn
c5 white knight
e5 black queen
b4 white pawn
e4 white knight
e3 white queen
f3 white pawn
g2 white pawn
h2 white pawn
a1 black rook
c1 white rook
g1 white king
8
77
66
55
44
33
22
11
abcdefgh
Position after 33 moves
abcdefgh
8
h7 black pawn
b6 black rook
f6 black pawn
h6 white pawn
g5 black pawn
h5 white knight
g4 white pawn
f3 black king
h3 white king
8
77
66
55
44
33
22
11
abcdefgh
Final position after 69 moves, White resigned

Further reading

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  • Helmut Riedl: Das Leben und Schaffen von Klaus Junge. Unterhaching 1995. ISBN 3-9804896-0-4

References

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Notes

  1. ^ Werner Brähler: Erinnerungen an den Reichsarbeitsdienst 1943.
  2. ^ ChessBase.com - Chess News - Wolfgang Unzicker turns eighty
  3. ^ 1941 Archived 27 September 2007 at the Wayback Machine
  4. ^ 1942 Archived 7 August 2007 at the Wayback Machine
  5. ^ Edmund Bruns: "Nationalsozialismus, Schach, Klaus Junge". Retrieved 6 September 2016. [dead link]
  6. ^ "Chessville - Three Early Games of Klaus Junge Analyzed - by Robert Tuohey". Archived from the original on 17 January 2013. Retrieved 7 March 2014. (Contains a mistake: Klaus Junge was actually not a member of the SS.)
  7. ^ 1946 Archived 27 September 2007 at the Wayback Machine
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