About the Book
Please note that the content of this book primarily consists of articles available from Wikipedia or other free sources online. Pages: 24. Chapters: Jacob Aagaard, Tim Harding, Edward Winter, Mary Rudge, Jacques Mieses, Georg Schories, Graham Burgess, David Vincent Hooper, Michael Basman, John Roycroft, Gerald Abrahams, Walter Grimshaw, Matthew Sadler, Tim Woolgar, Leopold Hoffer, Bernhard Horwitz, Chris Ward, Danny Gormally, Imre Konig, Nicholas Pert, Charles Bent, Paul List, George Walker, Agnes Stevenson, Nigel Davies, Victor Wahltuch, Stephen Francis Smith, Ken Whyld, Adolf Zytogorski, William Davies Evans, John Saunders, Augustus Mongredien, Selim Franklin, Eugene Ernest Colman, Stewart Reuben, Harold Saunders, Hugh Alexander Kennedy, H.W.B. Gifford, Jana Bellin, Brian Reilly, Victor Buerger, Mark Hebden, Nicholas MacLeod, Susan Lalic, Adrian Hollis, Adrian Garcia Conde, Edith Michell, Ernest Klein, Hugh Blandford, James Macrae Aitken, Olga Menchik, Peter Wells, Istvan Fazekas, Edward Lowe, Samuel Boden, Richard Griffith, Nathaniel Cook, Herbert William Trenchard, Reginald Pryce Michell, Jacob Ascher, Daniel Yarnton Mills, Edward Guthlac Sergeant, Miss Fatima, Edith Charlotte Price, David Forsyth, William Watson, Thomas Wilson Barnes, Aaron Summerscale, David Friedgood, Steve Giddins, Samuel Tinsley, Mary Gilchrist, Rawle Allicock. Excerpt: Jacob Aagaard (born 31 July 1973) is a Danish-born Scottish Grandmaster of chess who won the 94th British Championship in 2007. He is Scotland's second highest ranked player as of January 2010, with an Elo rating of 2538. In 2004, he took second place in the Scottish Chess Championship. In 2005, he took first place in the Scottish Championship, but was not a British citizen. The title went to Craig Pritchett. He is also a chess author and co-owner of Quality Chess, a chess publishing house. Timothy David (Tim) Harding (born 6 May 1948 in London) is a prolific chess player and author with particular expertise regardi...