David H. Li

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For the Chairman and Chief Executive of the Bank of East Asia, see David Li
For the economist, see David Daokui Li
This is a Chinese name; the family name is Li.

Professor David H. Li is an author and expert on Chinese history and chess. He has written several books and also translated several Chinese classics to English. He was born in 1928 in Ningbo, Zhejiang, China, and moved to the United States in 1949, where he still lives in Bethesda, Maryland. He was an accountant and accounting teacher. His academic career included lectures at the University of Washington, Seattle, and as a Ford Foundation Visiting Professor at the Chinese University of Hong Kong. Later he joined the World Bank Group. After retirement, Professor Li published a number of books in English on the culture of China, including translations of the Analects of Confucius, The Art of War, and Tao Te Ching, as well as several books on Xiangqi or Chinese chess. In his book "The Genealogy of Chess" (which won the 'Book of the Year' 1998 award from the editors of GAMES Magazine), Professor Li surveys evidence regarding the origins of chess and concludes that an early version of chess called Xiangqi was invented in China in 203 BC, by General Han Xin, who supposedly drew on the earlier game Liubo as well as on the teachings of The Art of War. Professor Li suggests that this game had spread via the Silk Road, to Persia (becoming various forms of Shatranj) and India (becoming various forms of Chaturanga), as well as to Japan (becoming Shogi) and Korea (becoming Janggi).

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