Jānis Kļaviņš Explained

Jānis Kļaviņš
Country:Latvia
Birth Date:27 April 1933
Birth Place:Rīga, Latvia
Death Place:Latvia
National master

Jānis Kļaviņš (April 27, 1933  - November 25, 2008) was a Latvian chess master who won the Latvian Chess Championship in 1952.

Chess career

Jānis Kļaviņš had a short but bright chess player career. He won Latvian Championship in 1952[1] and three times won the bronze medals (1956,[2] 1959,[3] 1960[4]).In 1955 Jānis Kļaviņš fulfilled chess master norm in Team Championship of USSR in Voroshilovgrad. In 1956 Kļaviņš won the All-Union Mass Tournament in Moscow,[5] ahead Isaac Boleslavsky, Vladimir Makogonov, Leonid Stein, Ratmir Kholmov). Kļaviņš played for Latvia in Soviet team chess championship in 1953 (won first prize on third board), 1955, 1958, 1959, 1960 (won third place on third board), 1962, and 1963,[6] and for Latvian team "Daugava" in the Soviet team chess cup in 1954 and 1961.[7] He was well versed in all aspects of chess theory and technique but his strength lied in his ability to make combinations.

Career in science

After completing Faculty of Physics and Mathematics University of Latvia in 1957, Kļaviņš enrolled at the Institute of Physics of Latvian Academy of Sciences (now - Institute of Physics of University of Latvia).[8] He started career in science and ended chess player career. Jānis Kļaviņš has worked as an engineer, scientist, laboratory director, scientific secretary and deputy director of scientific work. He performed research in Magnetohydrodynamics problems and earning his doctorate degree in Physics from there.

References

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Ch Latvia 1952 . Narod.ru.
  2. Web site: Ch Latvia 1956 . Narod.ru.
  3. Web site: Ch Latvia 1959 . Narod.ru.
  4. Web site: Ch Latvia 1960 . Narod.ru.
  5. Web site: All-Union Mass Tournament- Moscow 15-29.10.1956 . Narod.ru.
  6. Web site: Soviet Team Chess Cup :: Jānis Kļaviņš . OlimpBase.org.
  7. Web site: Soviet Team Chess Championship :: Jānis Kļaviņš . OlimpBase.org.
  8. Web site: LU Institute of Physics . IPUL.lv.