Friedrich Amelung

Friedrich Ludwig Balthasar Amelung (Template:OldStyleDate – Template:OldStyleDate) was a Baltic German cultural historian, businessman and chess endgame composer.
Amelung was born at Võisiku (Template:Langx) manor in Governorate of Livonia of the Russian Empire (present-day Jõgeva County in Estonia). 1862–1864 he studied philosophy and chemistry at the Imperial University of Dorpat. From 1864 to 1879 and from 1885 to 1902 he was the director of the Rõika-Meleski mirror factory, which he inherited from his father. Amelung published writings about the culture and history of Estonian localities such as Viljandi, Tallinn, and Põltsamaa.<ref name=tea>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>
Amelung was known as a chess player and a famous chess quiz author. From 1879 to 1885 he lived in Reval (now Tallinn) and studied the chess history of the Baltics. Between 1888 and 1908 he edited the chess magazine Baltische Schachblätter. In 1898 he established the Baltic Chess Society. Amelung published about 230 endgame studies, making him the first chess historian in the Baltic States.<ref name=viljandi>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>
He played a few games with Adolf Anderssen, Gustav Neumann, Carl Mayet, Emil Schallopp, Andreas Ascharin, and Emanuel Schiffers.
He died in 1909 in Riga and is buried at the Kolga-Jaani cemetery in Estonia.<ref name=tea/>
References
Sources
External links
- Template:Chessgames player
- ARVES Composers biographical data.
- Lewis Stiller: Multilinear Algebra and Chess Endgames, in: Games of No Chance, 29 (1996), p. 151–192 (Amelung's contribution to endgame analysis)
- 1842 births
- 1909 deaths
- Russian people of German descent
- People from Põltsamaa Parish
- People from Kreis Fellin
- Baltic-German people from the Russian Empire
- Chess composers
- Chess players from the Russian Empire
- Estonian chess players
- 19th-century chess players from the Russian Empire
- Estonian businesspeople
- 19th-century Estonian historians
- Historians from the Russian Empire
- 19th-century businesspeople from the Russian Empire
- Cultural historians
- Historians of Estonia
- University of Tartu alumni