European Chess Union

Governing body for chess in Europe
  • Europe
Membership
54 national federations
President
Zurab AzmaiparashviliWebsitewww.europechess.org

The European Chess Union (ECU) is an independent association for the interests of European chess.[1] The European Chess Union was founded on August 30th, 1985, with the organization's founding meeting taking place in Graz, Austria.[2]

Board

The European Chess Union Board is elected for a four-year term. It's members for the 2022-2026 term are the following:[3][4]

  • Zurab Azmaiparashvili – President
  • Dana Reizniece-Ozola – Deputy President
  • Gunnar Bjornsson – Vice President
  • Malcolm Pein – Vice President
  • Alojzije Jankovic – Vice President
  • Eva Repková – Vice President
  • Jean-Michel Rapaire – Vice President
  • Theodoros Tsorbatzoglou – Secretary General
  • Ion-Serban Dobronauteanu – Treasurer
  • Vanja Draskovic – Honorary Vice President
  • Johann Poecksteiner – Honorary Vice President

ECU presidents

  • 1985-1986: Rolf Littorin, Sweden
  • 1986-1998: Kurt Jungwirth, Austria
  • 1998-2010: Boris Kutin, Slovenia
  • 2010-2014: Silvio Danailov, Bulgaria
  • 2014–present: Zurab Azmaiparashvili, Georgia

Member federations

  • Albania – Albanian Chess Federation
  • Andorra – Andorran Chess Federation
  • Armenia – Chess Federation of Armenia
  • Austria – Austrian Chess Federation
  • Azerbaijan – Azerbaijan Chess Federation
  • Belarus – Belarus Chess Federation (suspended)
  • Belgium – Royal Belgian Chess Federation
  • Bosnia and Herzegovina – Chess Union of Bosnia and Herzegovina
  • Croatia – Croatian Chess Federation
  • Cyprus – Cyprus Chess Federation
  • Czech Republic – Chess Federation of the Czech Republic
  • Denmark – Danish Chess Union
  • England – English Chess Federation
  • Estonia – Estonian Chess Federation
  • Faroe Islands – Faroese Chess Federation
  • Finland – Finnish Chess Federation
  • France – French Chess Federation
  • Georgia – Georgian Chess Federation
  • Germany – German Chess Federation
  • Greece – Greek Chess Federation
  • Guernsey – Guernsey Chess Federation
  • Hungary – Hungarian Chess Federation
  • Iceland – Icelandic Chess Federation
  • Ireland – Irish Chess Union
  • Israel – Israel Chess Federation
  • Italy – Italian Chess Federation
  • Jersey – Jersey Chess Federation
  • Latvia – Latvian Chess Federation
  • Liechtenstein – Liechtenstein Chess Federation
  • Lithuania – Lithuanian Chess Federation
  • Luxembourg – Luxembourg Chess Federation
  • Malta – Malta Chess Federation
  • Moldova – Moldova Chess Federation
  • Monaco – Monaco Chess Federation
  • Montenegro – Montenegro Chess Federation
  • Netherlands – Royal Dutch Chess Federation
  • North Macedonia – Chess Federation of Macedonia
  • Norway – Norwegian Chess Federation
  • Poland – Polish Chess Federation
  • Portugal – Portuguese Chess Federation
  • Romania – Romanian Chess Federation
  • San Marino – San Marino Chess Federation
  • Scotland – Chess Scotland
  • Serbia – Chess Federation of Serbia
  • Slovakia – Slovak Chess Federation
  • Slovenia – Slovenian Chess Federation
  • Spain – Spanish Chess Federation
  • Sweden – Swedish Chess Federation
  • Switzerland – Swiss Chess Federation
  • Turkey – Turkish Chess Federation
  • Ukraine – Ukrainian Chess Federation
  • Wales – Welsh Chess Union

The Bulgarian Chess Federation was expelled on 10 September 2016.[5][6]

Belarus was suspended on 5 March 2022 in response to the 2022 Russian invasion of Ukraine.[7] Russia (Russian Chess Federation) withdrew from the European Chess Union on 14 April 2022,[8] and later joined the Asian Chess Federation on 23 February 2023.[9] Both countries were banned from attending the 2022 Chess Olympiad.[10]

ECU tournaments

Individual championships

Team championships

References

  1. ^ President's Office, ECU, retrieved 2015-04-02
  2. ^ "ECU History". European Chess Union. Retrieved 19 February 2024.
  3. ^ "European Chess Union re-elects Georgian Zurab Azmaiparashvili as President". Agenda.ge. Retrieved 19 February 2024.
  4. ^ "Communique of the ECU General Assembly and Elections 2022". European Chess Union. 27 July 2022. Retrieved 19 February 2024.
  5. ^ ECU (2017-05-23). "CAS DISMISSED BULGARIAN CHESS FEDERATION APPEAL". European Chess Union. Retrieved 2023-08-10.
  6. ^ Goran (2017-06-13). "CAS Award – ECU vs Bulgarian Chess Federation – Chessdom". www.chessdom.com. Retrieved 2023-08-10.
  7. ^ "ECU suspends the Russian and Belarusian Chess Federations", Chessbase, 5 March 2022
  8. ^ "Russian Chess Federation votes for membership in Asian Chess Federation", TASS, 15 April 2022
  9. ^ Patrick, Burke (23 February 2023). "FIDE approves Chess Federation of Russia switch to Asia". insidethegames. Retrieved 14 April 2023.
  10. ^ "Chess teams from Russia, Belarus not to play in Chennai Olympiad". The South Asian Times. Retrieved 19 February 2024.

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