David Enoch (1901–1949) was an Israeli chess player.
David Enoch was born in Oświęcim in 1901. He emigrated to Berlin after the First World War. He tied for 6-7th[ clarification needed] at Berlin 1927 ( Alfred Brinckmann won), and took 10th at Berlin 1929 ( Berthold Koch won). [1]
Enoch immigrated from Germany to British Mandate Palestine in 1933.
He took 2nd, behind Abram Blass, at Tel Aviv 1935 (the 2nd Maccabiah Games). [2] He played for Palestine on second board in the 6th Chess Olympiad at Warsaw 1935 (+6 –6 =5).
He won against Creevey ( IRL), Henri Grob ( SUI), Bjørn Nielsen ( DEN), Rasmusson ( FIN), George Alan Thomas ( ENG), and Karel Opočensky ( CSR).
He drew with Stefano Rosselli del Turco ( ITA), Mieczysław Najdorf ( POL), Aleksandras Machtas ( LTU), Frank Marshall ( USA), and Andor Lilienthal ( HUN).
He lost to Louis Betbeder Matibet ( FRA), Milan Vidmar ( YUG), Rudolf Spielmann ( AUT), Gunnar Friedemann ( EST), Miklós Bródy ( ROM), and Gösta Stoltz ( SWE). [3]
A game he lost at Berlin 1927 against Aron Nimzowitsch is included in Nimzowitsch's My Praxis.
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cite web}}
: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (
link) Name Index to Jeremy Gaige's Chess Tournament Crosstables, An Electronic Edition, Anders Thulin, Malmö, 2004-09-01
David Enoch (1901–1949) was an Israeli chess player.
David Enoch was born in Oświęcim in 1901. He emigrated to Berlin after the First World War. He tied for 6-7th[ clarification needed] at Berlin 1927 ( Alfred Brinckmann won), and took 10th at Berlin 1929 ( Berthold Koch won). [1]
Enoch immigrated from Germany to British Mandate Palestine in 1933.
He took 2nd, behind Abram Blass, at Tel Aviv 1935 (the 2nd Maccabiah Games). [2] He played for Palestine on second board in the 6th Chess Olympiad at Warsaw 1935 (+6 –6 =5).
He won against Creevey ( IRL), Henri Grob ( SUI), Bjørn Nielsen ( DEN), Rasmusson ( FIN), George Alan Thomas ( ENG), and Karel Opočensky ( CSR).
He drew with Stefano Rosselli del Turco ( ITA), Mieczysław Najdorf ( POL), Aleksandras Machtas ( LTU), Frank Marshall ( USA), and Andor Lilienthal ( HUN).
He lost to Louis Betbeder Matibet ( FRA), Milan Vidmar ( YUG), Rudolf Spielmann ( AUT), Gunnar Friedemann ( EST), Miklós Bródy ( ROM), and Gösta Stoltz ( SWE). [3]
A game he lost at Berlin 1927 against Aron Nimzowitsch is included in Nimzowitsch's My Praxis.
{{
cite web}}
: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (
link) Name Index to Jeremy Gaige's Chess Tournament Crosstables, An Electronic Edition, Anders Thulin, Malmö, 2004-09-01