Marcel Engelmann (born 1895, date of death unknown) was a Belgian chess master.
He won at Maastricht 1929 and took 3rd at Ghent 1929 (Edgard Colle won), both quadrangular tournaments. [1] He took 2nd, behind Georges Koltanowski, at Verviers 1930 (Belgian Chess Championship), [2] and tied for 4-6th at Liège 1934 (BEL-ch, Victor Soultanbeieff won). [3]
Engelmann played for Belgium on third board in the 5th Chess Olympiad at Folkestone 1933. [4] Today there is a website about him. [5]
Movsas Feigins or Movša Feigin was a Latvian chess master.
Gösta Stoltz was a Swedish chess grandmaster.
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Ludwig Engels was a German–Brazilian chess master.
Karel Skalička was a Czech-Argentine chess master.
Erik Ruben Lundin was a Swedish chess master.
Roberto Gabriel Grau was an Argentine chess master. He was born and died in Buenos Aires. In the late 1920's he was Argentina's strongest chess-player.
Isaías Pleci was an Argentine chess master.
Erik Andersen was a Danish chess master.
Karl Gilg was a German chess International Master from Czechoslovakia.
Victor Kahn was a Russian–French chess master.
Kornél Havasi was a Jewish-Hungarian chess master.
Árpád Vajda was a Hungarian chess master. He was also a Doctor of Law and State Science, and worked as chief of police in Budapest.
Aristide Gromer was a French chess master.
Karl Helling was a German chess master.
Károly Sterk was a Hungarian chess master.
Paul Devos was a Belgian chess master.
Amos Pokorný was a Czech legionnaire and chess master.
Iosif (Josef) Mendelssohn was a Romanian chess master.
Eduard (Esra) Glass was an Austrian chess master.
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: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link) Name Index to Jeremy Gaige's Chess Tournament Crosstables, An Electronic Edition, Anders Thulin, Malmö, 2004-09-01{{cite web}}
: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)