Pierre Charles Fournier de Saint-Amant (12 September 1800 – 29 October 1872) was a leading French chess master and an editor of the chess periodical Le Palamède. He is best known for losing a match against Howard Staunton in 1843 that is often considered to have been an unofficial match for the World Chess Championship.
Pierre de Saint-Amant | |
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Pierre Saint-Amant | |
Full name | Pierre Charles Fournier de Saint-Amant |
Country | France |
Born | (1800-09-12)12 September 1800 |
Died | 29 October 1872(1872-10-29) (aged 72) Algeria |
Saint-Amant learned chess from Wilhelm Schlumberger, who later became the operator of The Turk.[1][2][3] He played at the Café de la Régence, where he was a student of Alexandre Deschapelles.[1][4] For many years he played on level terms with Boncourt, a strong player, and received odds of pawn and two moves from Deschapelles and Louis-Charles Mahé de La Bourdonnais.[3] In 1834–36, he led a Paris team that won both games of a correspondence match against the Westminster Club, then England's leading chess club.[5] After La Bourdonnais' death in 1840, he was considered the country's best player.[1][3] In December 1841 he revived Le Palamède (at its inception in 1836 the world's first chess periodical),[6][7] which ran until 1847.[4][8]
He played two matches against Staunton in 1843. The first, in London, he won 3½–2½ (three wins, one draw, two losses), but he lost a return match in Paris just before Christmas 13–8 (six wins, four draws, eleven losses).[9] This second match is sometimes considered an unofficial world championship match.[1][4]
In 1858, Saint-Amant played in the Birmingham tournament, a knockout event. He won in the first round, but lost in the second by a 2–1 score to Ernst Falkbeer.[10] Returning to Paris, he witnessed the adulatory reception accorded Paul Morphy at the Café de la Régence.[11][12] The score of one game between them is known, a 22-move rout by Morphy of Saint-Amant and his consultation partner, given as "F. de L." or "F. de L'A".[13][14][15]
Saint-Amant became a government clerk in Paris at an early age.[3] He then served as the secretary to the governor of French Guiana from 1819 to 1821.[3][4] He was dismissed from that appointment after he protested against the slave trade that still existed in that colony.[2][3][16] After that, he tried his hand as a journalist and actor, then became a successful wine merchant.[2][3][16] He was a captain in the French National Guard during the 1848 revolution. For his role in saving the Palais des Tuileries from destruction by the mob, he was made its Governor for a few months.[3][4][16] In 1851–52, he was the French consul to California.[3][16] He visited during this period the Territory of Oregon, witnessed a period of transition for the early settlements and wrote one of the few records available on this period. Upon returning to France he spent some years writing well-regarded works on the French colonies, and a treatise on the wines of Bordeaux.[3]
In 1861 Saint-Amant retired to Algeria.[1][2][4] He died there in 1872 after being thrown from his carriage.[1][4]
Position after 22.d5!
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Position after 23...Qd8
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Reuben Fine writes that although Saint-Amant lost his epic match against Staunton, in the 13th match game, playing White, "he at least had the satisfaction of winning the most brilliant game."[16]
In the 9th match game, Saint-Amant had pulled off a swindle that grandmaster Andrew Soltis considers the greatest ever perpetrated in match play.
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