Larissa Ilinichna Volpert (Russian: Лариса Ильинична Вольперт; 30 March 1926[1] – 1 October 2017) was a Soviet chess Woman Grandmaster and Russian and Estonian philologist. She was a three-time Soviet women's chess champion (1954, 1958, and 1959).
Born in Leningrad, she learned chess from her older brother and received chess instruction at the Leningrad Pioneers Palace. In 1947, she tied for first at the Leningrad Women's Championship. She played her first USSR Women's Championship in 1949 and finished equal fifth. In 1954, she won her first USSR Women's Championship. She scored 2–0 against Nina Hrušková-Bělská in the 1954 USSR v. Czechoslovakia match. In 1958 she shared the USSR Women's Championship title, and in 1959 she won for the third time, her second outright victory.[2]
Volpert earned the Woman International Master title in 1954 and the Woman Grandmaster title in 1978.[1] She had a degree in philology from Leningrad University[2] and since 1977 taught Russian philology at the University of Tartu, Estonia. Her major works are about Pushkin's and Lermontov's poetry, especially in their connections to French literature. She died at the age of 91 on 1 October 2017.[3]
References
- ^ a b Gaige, Jeremy (1987), Chess Personalia, A Biobibliography, McFarland, p. 449, ISBN 0-7864-2353-6
- ^ a b Sunnucks, Anne (1970), The Encyclopaedia of Chess, St. Martin's Press, pp. 521–22, LCCN 78106371
- ^ Умерла Лариса Ильинична Вольперт // Postimees, 1.10.2017. (in Russian)
External links
- Larisa Ilinichna Volpert player profile and games at Chessgames.com
- 1926 births
- 2017 deaths
- Russian Jews
- Chess Woman Grandmasters
- Russian female chess players
- Russian chess players
- Soviet female chess players
- Soviet chess players
- Jewish chess players
- Chess players from Saint Petersburg
- Saint Petersburg State University alumni
- Estonian female chess players
- Estonian chess players
- Academic staff of the University of Tartu
- Sportspeople from Tartu
- Soviet literary historians
- Mikhail Lermontov scholars
- Women literary historians
- Russian chess biography stubs