Howard Staunton and many of his 19th-century contemporaries understood various ideas associated with hypermodernism. The Hypermodern school of chess theory came to prominence in the 1920s. Leading members were
Aron Nimzowitsch,
Richard Réti,
Savielly Tartakower,
Gyula Breyer,
Efim Bogoljubov, and
Ernst Grünfeld, who all came from
Central Europe. They felt that chess was becoming boring, slow, and not worthwhile. They also believed that chess could not be defined by a simple set of laws or principles, such as those laid out by
Siegbert Tarrasch. Their ideas were thus a challenge to the existing orthodoxy popularised by Tarrasch in the 1890s. This orthodoxy was a rather dogmatic distillation of the ideas worked out by chess pioneer
Wilhelm Steinitz. Steinitz was the first player who in his play demonstrated a mastery of , and the ideas he developed came to be known as the "Classical" or "Modern" school of thought. This school of thought emphasised the importance of "static" advantages such as avoidance of pawn weaknesses, strong outposts for knights, and striving for
"good" rather than "bad" bishops in positions with locked pawn structures. This school of thought was in turn a reaction to the earlier swashbuckling style of
Adolf Anderssen,
Henry Blackburne, and others, who represented the
Romantic school. In 1922, Réti published
Die neuen Ideen im Schachspiel (English:
The New Ideas in Chess), an examination of the evolution of chess thinking from the time of
Paul Morphy through the beginning of the Hypermodern school. The name "hypermodern" was originated by Tartakower; his book
Die hypermoderne Schachpartie (English:
The Hypermodern Chess Game) was published in 1924. Nimzowitsch's book
Mein System (English:
My System) was published in 1925 through to 1927 in five installments. It discusses elements of hypermodernism, but focuses mainly on positional chess. ==References==