The 1st Team Chess Tournament was held together with the 1924 Summer Olympics in Paris, 12–20 July 1924, at the Hotel Majestic. Fifty-four players representing 18 countries were split into nine preliminary groups of six. The winner of each round qualified for the Championship while the rest joined an eight-round Swiss consolation tournament.[1][2]
Results
The final results were as follows:
Amateur World Championship
- # - Player - Points - Buch - 1  Hermanis Matisons (LAT) Hermanis Matisons (LAT)- 5.5 - 2  Fricis Apšenieks (LAT) Fricis Apšenieks (LAT)- 5.0 - 3 .svg.png.webp) Edgard Colle (BEL) Edgard Colle (BEL)- 4.5 - 4 .svg.png.webp) Árpád Vajda (HUN) Árpád Vajda (HUN)- 4 - 16.75 - 5  Machgielis Euwe (NED) Machgielis Euwe (NED)- 4 - 15.75 - 6  Anatol Tschepurnoff (FIN) Anatol Tschepurnoff (FIN)- 4 - 14.75 - 7 .svg.png.webp) Luis Argentino Palau (ARG) Luis Argentino Palau (ARG)- 3.5 - 8 .svg.png.webp) Manuel Golmayo de la Torriente (ESP) Manuel Golmayo de la Torriente (ESP)- 3 - 9 .svg.png.webp) Kornél Havasi (HUN) Kornél Havasi (HUN)- 2.5 
Consolation Cup
- # - Player - Σ Points - Qual. - Final - 1  Karel Hromádka (TCH) Karel Hromádka (TCH)- 9.5 - 3 - 6.5 - 2  Jan Schulz (TCH) Jan Schulz (TCH)- 9 - 4 - 5 - 3 .svg.png.webp) Erwin Voellmy (SUI) Erwin Voellmy (SUI)- 8.5 - 3.5 - 5 - 4  Kārlis Bētiņš (LAT) Kārlis Bētiņš (LAT)- 8 - 2 - 6 .svg.png.webp) Georges Renaud (FRA) Georges Renaud (FRA)- 8 - 3 - 5 .svg.png.webp) Roberto Grau (ARG) Roberto Grau (ARG)- 8 - 3.5 - 4.5 .svg.png.webp) George Koltanowski (BEL) George Koltanowski (BEL)- 8 - 3.5 - 4.5 - 8 .svg.png.webp) Giovanni Cenni (ITA) Giovanni Cenni (ITA)- 7.5 - 1.5 - 6 .svg.png.webp) Endre Steiner (HUN) Endre Steiner (HUN)- 7.5 - 2 - 5.5 .svg.png.webp) Otto Zimmermann (SUI) Otto Zimmermann (SUI)- 7.5 - 2.5 - 5 .svg.png.webp) Dawid Daniuszewski (POL) Dawid Daniuszewski (POL)- 7.5 - 2.5 - 5 .svg.png.webp) Károly Sterk (HUN) Károly Sterk (HUN)- 7.5 - 3 - 4.5 .svg.png.webp) Damián Reca (ARG) Damián Reca (ARG)- 7.5 - 3.5 - 4 - 14–45 - etc. 
Individual medals
- # - Player - Achievement - 1  Hermanis Matisons (LAT) Hermanis Matisons (LAT)- Championship Final Winner - 2  Fricis Apšenieks (LAT) Fricis Apšenieks (LAT)- Championship Final 2nd place .svg.png.webp) Edgard Colle (BEL) Edgard Colle (BEL)- Championship Final 3rd place - 3 .svg.png.webp) Árpád Vajda (HUN) Árpád Vajda (HUN)- Championship Final Participant  Machgielis Euwe (NED) Machgielis Euwe (NED)- Championship Final Participant  Anatol Tschepurnoff (FIN) Anatol Tschepurnoff (FIN)- Championship Final Participant  Luis Argentino Palau (ARG) Luis Argentino Palau (ARG)- Championship Final Participant .svg.png.webp) Manuel Golmayo de la Torriente (ESP) Manuel Golmayo de la Torriente (ESP)- Championship Final Participant .svg.png.webp) Kornél Havasi (HUN) Kornél Havasi (HUN)- Championship Final Participant  Karel Hromádka (TCH) Karel Hromádka (TCH)- Consolation Cup Winner 
Team classification
- # - Team - Points - Players - 1  Czechoslovakia Czechoslovakia- 31 - Hromádka 9½, Schulz 9, Vaněk 6½, Skalička 6 - 2 .svg.png.webp) Hungary Hungary- 30 - Vajda 8, Sterk 7½, Steiner E. 7½, Havasi 7 - 3 .svg.png.webp) Switzerland Switzerland- 29 - Voellmy 8½, Zimmermann 7½, Johner H. 6½, Naegeli 6½ - 4  Latvia Latvia- 27.5 - Apšenieks 10, Matisons 9½, Bētiņš 8  Argentina Argentina- 27.5 - Grau 8, Reca 7½, Palau 7, Fernández Coria 5 - 6 .svg.png.webp) Italy Italy- 26.5 - Cenni 7½, Rosselli del Turco 7, Romih 6½, Miliani 5½ - 7 .svg.png.webp) France France- 25.5 - Renaud 8, Lazard F. 6½, Duchamp 6, Gibaud 5 .svg.png.webp) Poland Poland- 25.5 - Daniuszewski 7½, Piltz 6, Kohn 6, Kleczyński 6 - 9 .svg.png.webp) Belgium Belgium- 24 - Colle 8½, Koltanowski 8, Lancel 5, Jonet 2½ - 10 .svg.png.webp) Spain Spain- 19 - Golmayo Torriente 7, Marin y Llovet 6, Rey Ardid 6 - 11  Netherlands Netherlands- 18.5 - Euwe 8, Oskam 6, Rueb 4½ - 12  Romania Romania- 18 - Davidescu 7, Gudju 6, Loewenton 5 - 13  Finland Finland- 15 - Tschepurnoff 9, Malmberg 6 - 14  Great Britain Great Britain- 12.5 - Handasyde 6, Wreford-Brown 3½ Holloway 3 - 15  Irish Free State Irish Free State- 5.5 - O'Hanlon 5½ - 16 .svg.png.webp) Canada Canada- 5 - Smith 5 - 17  Russia1 Russia1- 4.5 - Potemkine 3, Kahn 1½ - 18 .svg.png.webp) Kingdom of Serbs, Croats and Slovenes Kingdom of Serbs, Croats and Slovenes- 2.5 - Rozić 2½ 
1 Potemkine and Kahn were émigrés living in Paris and represented "Russia", not the Soviet Union.
FIDE
On 20 July, the last day of the games, 15 delegates from all over the World signed the proclamation act of the International Chess Federation (originally known as Fédération Internationale des Échecs in French) and elected Alexander Rueb of the Netherlands the first FIDE president.
Latin motto Gens una sumus ("we are one family") became official and well-recognized watchword of the chess unity. Below is the historic list of 15 founders of FIDE: Abonyi (Hungary), Grau (Argentina), Gudju (Romania), Marusi (Italy), Nicolet (Switzerland), Ovadija (Yugoslavia), Penalver y Zamora (Spain), Rawlins (Great Britain), Rueb (Netherlands), Skalička (Czechoslovakia), Smith (Canada), Towbin (Poland), Tschepurnoff (Finland), Vincent (France), Weltjens (Belgium).
References
- ↑ OlimpBase :: Chess Olympiad Paris 1924: information
- ↑ Stanisław Gawlikowski Olimpiady szachowe 1924 - 1974 Wyd. Sport i Turystyka, Warszawa 1978