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Major chess events that took place in 2019 include the Tata Steel, Shamkir Chess, Grenke Chess Classic and Norway Chess, all won by World Champion Magnus Carlsen.
12 December – The United Nations General Assembly approves a resolution designating 20 July as "World Chess Day", marking the date of the establishment of the International Chess Federation (FIDE) in Paris on 20 July 1924.[1]
Tournament | City | System | Dates | Players | Winner | Runner-up | Third |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Gibraltar Chess Festival | Gibraltar | Swiss | 21–31 Jan | 252 | Vladislav Artemiev | Karthikeyan Murali | Nikita Vitiugov |
Aeroflot Open | Moscow | Swiss | 18–28 Feb | 101 | Kaido Külaots | Haik Martirosyan | Krishnan Sasikiran |
European Individual Chess Championship | Skopje | Swiss | 18–29 Mar | 361 | Vladislav Artemiev | Nils Grandelius | Kacper Piorun |
Reykjavik Open | Reykjavík | Swiss | 8–16 Apr | 238 | Constantin Lupulescu | Alireza Firouzja | Nils Grandelius |
GRENKE Chess Open | Karlsruhe | Swiss | 18–22 Apr | 904 | Daniel Fridman | Anton Korobov | Andreas Heimann |
World Open | Philadelphia | Swiss | 2–7 Jul | 227 | Lê Quang Liêm | Jeffery Xiong | Hrant Melkumyan |
Riga Technical University Open | Riga | Swiss | 5–11 Aug | 275 | Igor Kovalenko | Šarūnas Šulskis | Arman Mikaelyan |
Tournament | City | System | Dates | Teams | Winner | Runner-up | Third |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
World Team Chess Championship | Astana | Round robin | 5–14 Mar | 10 | Russia | England | China |
Women's World Team Chess Championship | Astana | Round robin | 5–14 Mar | 10 | China | Russia | Georgia |
European Team Chess Championship | Batumi | Round robin | 23 Oct – 3 Nov | 40 | Russia | Ukraine | England |
Women's European Team Chess Championship | Batumi | Round robin | 23 Oct – 3 Nov | 32 | Russia | Georgia | Azerbaijan |