Café de la Régence

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The famous chess match between Howard Staunton and Pierre Charles Fournier de Saint-Amant, on 16 December 1843, by Jean-Henri Marlet

The Café de la Régence in Paris was an important European centre of chess in the 18th and 19th centuries. All important chess masters of the time played there.

The Café's masters included, but are not limited to:

Addresses[]

It was opened in 1681 as the Café de la Place du Palais-Royal, near the Palais-Royal, Paris. By the 18th century it was known as the Café de la Régence ("Regency Café").

  • In 1852 the café moved temporarily to hôtel Dodun, 21 Rue de Richelieu.
  • In 1854 the Café de la Régence moved to 161 Rue Saint-Honoré and remained there until it became a restaurant in 1910.
  • The chess players moved to the café de l'Univers in 1916.
  • The Office national marocain du tourisme (National Moroccan Tourist Office) took over the site in 1918.

Additional information[]

  • The "great tournament of Paris 1867," won by Ignatz von Kolisch over Szymon Winawer and Wilhelm Steinitz, was played there.
  • La Société des Amateurs was based there.
  • In 1742, the celebrated French writers and philosophers Diderot and Rousseau met at this café.[1]
  • Karl Marx met Friedrich Engels for the second time at this café on 28 August 1844.[2]
  • According to the painter  [fi], Jean Sibelius improvised the main theme, A Prayer to God, of the finale of his Third Symphony at Café de la Régence, in January 1906.[3]
  • The Norwegian painter Edvard Munch visited the café on 4 May 1885, during his first visit to France to study the French impressionists.[4]

References[]

  1. ^ Goldzink, Jean, XVIIIème siècle
  2. ^ While at their first meeting, a few years before, they were not very impreased with each other, the meeting at the Paris cafe was the start of their lifelong personal and political association. Marx, Karl; Engels, Friedrich (1964-01-01). The Communist Manifesto. Pantheon Books – via Google Books.
  3. ^ Ylirotu, Jeremias; et al. (Metropoli Oy (metropoli.fi)) (2002). "Ainolan ensimmäiset vuodet 1904-1908". www.sibelius.fi. Retrieved 2016-05-11.
  4. ^ Prideaux, Sue (2005). Edvard Munch - Behind the Scream. Yale University Press. p. 27.

Bibliography[]

External link[]

Coordinates: 48°51′36″N 2°20′33″E / 48.85990°N 2.34260°E / 48.85990; 2.34260

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