Early life Alekhine was born into a wealthy
Russian family in Moscow, Russia, on October 31, 1892. His father, Alexander Ivanovich Alekhin, was a landowner and Privy Councilor to the conservative legislative Fourth
Duma. His mother, Anisya Ivanovna Alekhina (born Prokhorova), was the daughter of a rich industrialist. Alekhine was introduced to chess by his mother, his older brother
Alexei, and his older sister Varvara.
Early chess career (1902–1914) Alekhine's first known game was from a
correspondence chess tournament that began on December 3, 1902, when he was ten years old. He participated in several correspondence tournaments, sponsored by the chess magazine
Shakhmatnoe Obozrenie ("Chess Review"), between 1902 and 1911. In 1907, he played his first
over-the-board tournament, the Moscow chess club's Spring Tournament. Later that year, he tied for 11th–13th in the club's Autumn Tournament; his elder brother,
Alexei, tied for 4th–6th place. In 1908, Alexander won the club's Spring Tournament, at the age of 15. In 1909, he won the All-Russian Amateur Tournament in
Saint Petersburg. For the next few years, he played in increasingly stronger tournaments, some of them outside Russia. At first he had mixed results, but by the age of 16 he had established himself as one of Russia's top players. He played first board in two friendly team matches: St. Petersburg Chess Club vs. Moscow Chess Club in 1911 and Moscow vs. St. Petersburg in 1912 (both drew with
Yevgeny Znosko-Borovsky). By the end of 1911, Alekhine moved to St. Petersburg, where he entered the Imperial Law School for Nobles. By 1912, he was the strongest chess player in the St. Petersburg Chess Society. In March 1912, he won the St. Petersburg Chess Club Winter Tournament. In April 1912, he won the 1st Category Tournament of the St. Petersburg Chess Club. In January 1914, Alekhine won his first major Russian tournament, when he tied for first place with
Aron Nimzowitsch in the
All-Russian Masters Tournament at St. Petersburg. Afterwards, they
drew in a mini-match for first prize (each won a game). Alekhine also played several matches in this period, and his results showed the same pattern: mixed at first but later consistently good.
Top-level grandmaster (1914–1927) In April–May 1914, another major
St. Petersburg 1914 chess tournament was held in the capital of the Russian Empire, in which Alekhine took third place behind
Emanuel Lasker and
José Raúl Capablanca. By some accounts,
Tsar Nicholas II conferred the title of "
Grandmaster of Chess" on each of the five finalists (Lasker, Capablanca, Alekhine,
Siegbert Tarrasch, and
Frank Marshall). (Chess historian
Edward Winter has questioned this, stating that the earliest known sources supporting this story are an article by Robert Lewis Taylor in the June 15, 1940, issue of
The New Yorker and Marshall's autobiography
My 50 Years of Chess (1942).) Alekhine's surprising success made him a serious contender for the
World Chess Championship. In July 1914, Alekhine tied for first with Marshall in Paris.
World War I and post-revolutionary Russia In July–August 1914, Alekhine was leading an international
Mannheim tournament, the 19th
DSB Congress (German Chess Federation Congress) in
Mannheim, Germany, with nine wins, one draw and one loss, when World War I broke out. Alekhine's prize was 1,100 marks (worth about 11,000
euros in terms of purchasing power today). After the declaration of war against Russia, eleven "Russian" players (Alekhine,
Efim Bogoljubov,
Fedor Bogatyrchuk,
Alexander Flamberg,
N. Koppelman,
Boris Maliutin,
Ilya Rabinovich,
Peter Romanovsky,
Pyotr Saburov,
Alexey Selezniev, and
Samuil Weinstein) were interned in Rastatt, Germany. On September 14, 17, and 29 of 1914, four of them (Alekhine, Bogatyrchuk, Saburov, and Koppelman) were freed and allowed to return home. Alekhine made his way back to Russia (via Switzerland, Italy, London, Sweden, and Finland) by the end of October 1914. A fifth player, Romanovsky, was released in 1915, and a sixth, Flamberg, was allowed to return to Warsaw in 1916. When Alekhine returned to Russia, he helped raise money by giving simultaneous exhibitions to aid the Russian chess players who remained interned in Germany. In December 1915, he won the Moscow Chess Club Championship. In April 1916, he won a mini-match against
Alexander Evensohn with two wins and one loss at
Kiev, and in summer he served in the Union of Cities (Red Cross) on the Austrian front. In September, he played five people in a blindfold display at a Russian military hospital at
Tarnopol. In 1918, he won a "triangular tournament" in Moscow. In June of the following year, after the Russians forced the German army to retreat from
Ukraine, Alekhine was charged with links with
White movement counter-intelligence and was briefly imprisoned in
Odessa's death cell by the Odessa
Cheka. Rumors appeared in the West that he had been killed by the
Bolsheviks.
1920–1927 When conditions in Russia became more settled, Alekhine proved he was among Russia's strongest players. In January 1920, he swept the
championship of Moscow (11/11), but was not declared champion because he was not a resident of the city. In October 1920 he won the All-Russian Chess Olympiad in Moscow (+9−0=6); the tournament was retroactively called the
first USSR Championship. His brother Alexei took third place in the tournament for amateurs. In March 1920, Alekhine married Alexandra Batayeva. They divorced the next year. For a short time in 1920–21, he worked as an interpreter for the Communist International (
Comintern) and was appointed secretary to the Education Department. In this capacity, he met a Swiss journalist and Comintern delegate,
Annelise Rüegg, who was thirteen years his senior, and they married on March 15, 1921. Shortly after getting married, Alekhine was given permission to leave Russia for a visit to the West with his wife, from whom he separated in June 1921. He would never return to Russia, and made France his base for much of the following twenty years. In 1921–1923, Alekhine played seven mini-matches. In 1921, he won against
Nikolay Grigoriev (+2−0=5) in Moscow, drew with
Richard Teichmann (+2−2=2) and won against
Friedrich Sämisch (+2−0=0), both in Berlin. In 1922, he won against
Ossip Bernstein (+1−0=1) and
Arnold Aurbach (+1−0=1), both in Paris, and
Manuel Golmayo (+1−0=1) in
Madrid. In 1923, he won against
André Muffang (+2−0=0) in Paris.), of which the defending champion would receive over half even if defeated. Raising the money was Alekhine's preliminary objective; he even went on tour, playing simultaneous exhibitions for modest fees day after day. In New York on April 27, 1924, he broke the world record for simultaneous blindfold play when he played twenty-six opponents (the previous record was twenty-five, set by
Gyula Breyer), winning sixteen games, losing five, and drawing five after twelve hours of play. He broke his own world record on February 1, 1925, by playing twenty-eight games blindfold simultaneously in Paris, winning twenty-two, drawing three, and losing three. His French citizenship application was postponed because of his frequent travels abroad to play chess and because he was reported once in April 1922, shortly after his arrival in France, as a "bolshevist charged by the Soviets of a special mission in France". Later in 1927, the
French Chess Federation asked the Ministry of Justice to intervene in Alekhine's favor to have him lead the French team in the first Nation tournament to be held in London in July 1927. Nevertheless, Alekhine had to wait for a new law on naturalization which was published on 10 August 1927. The decree granting him
French nationality (among hundreds of other applicants) was signed on 5 November 1927 and published in the
Official Gazette of the French Republic on 14–15 November 1927, while Alekhine was playing Capablanca for the World title in Buenos Aires. In October 1926, Alekhine won in
Buenos Aires. In December 1926 / January 1927, he defeated
Max Euwe 5½–4½ in a training match in the Netherlands. In 1927, he married his third wife, Nadiezda Vasiliev (née Fabritzky), another older woman, the widow of the Russian general V. Vasiliev. ==World Chess Champion, first reign (1927–1935)==