Caïssa is a fictional (anachronistic) Thracian dryad portrayed as the goddess of chess. She was first mentioned during the Renaissance by Italian poet Hieronymus Vida.
The concept of Caïssa originated in a 658-line poem called Scacchia Ludus published in 1527 by Hieronymus Vida (Marco Girolamo Vida), which describes in Latin Virgilian hexameters a chess game between Apollo and Mercury in the presence of the other gods, and among them a dryad of chess named Schacchia. In it, to avoid unclassical words such as rochus (chess rook) or alfinus (chess bishop), the rooks are described as towers (armored howdahs) on elephants' backs, and the bishops as archers:
A leaked unauthorized 742-line draft version was published in 1525. Its text is very different, and in it the chess rook is a cyclops, and the chess bishop is a centaur archer.
The description of towers led to the modern name "castle" for the chess rook, and thus the term "castling", and the modern shape of the European rook chesspiece. Also for a time, some chess players in Europe called the rook "elephant" and the bishop "archer". In German, Schütze ("archer") became a general word for a chess bishop until displaced by Läufer ("runner") in the 18th century.
The young English orientalist William Jones re-used the idea of a chess poem in 1763, in his own poem Caïssa or The Game at Chess[1] written in English heroic couplets. In his poem, Caïssa initially repels the advances of the god of war, Mars. Spurned, Mars seeks the aid of Euphron, God of Sport (Jones's invention), brother of Venus, who creates the game of chess as a gift for Mars to win Caïssa's favor.
It is an unproven assumption that Jones's name "Caïssa" (ka-is-sa) is an equivalent to Vida's name "Scacchia" (ska-ki-a).
The English version of Philidor's 1777 Systematic introduction to the game and the analysis of chess contained Jones's poem. In 1851 the poem was translated into French by Camille Théodore Frédéric Alliey.[2]
Victoria Winifred continued the story introduced in William Jones's poem in her 2022 mythological fantasy, *The Princess, the Knight, and the Lost God: A Chess Story*.[3] In Winifred's continuation, Mars and Caïssa marry following the events depicted in Jones's work. Caïssa gains immortality and becomes a goddess, and together they rule over Chess Mountain. Their 12-year-old daughter, Princess Kassie, later undertakes a series of adventures on Earth, through which she establishes her own goddess title within the chess realm.
Caïssa is referred to in chess commentary.
The computer program that won the first World Computer Chess Championship (in 1974) was named Kaissa.
The card game features a program type named Caïssa, which are modeled after chess pieces.
In Michael Chabon’s novel The Yiddish Policemen's Union, a character writes an Acrostic letter that spells Caissa.
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