Grasshopper (chess piece)

The grasshopper is a fairy chess piece that moves along ranks, files, and diagonals (as an ordinary queen) but only by hopping over another piece at any distance to the square immediately closest. If there is no piece to hop over, it cannot move. If the square beyond a piece is occupied by a piece of the opposite color, the grasshopper can capture that piece. The grasshopper may jump over pieces of either color; the piece being jumped over is unaffected.

The grasshopper was introduced by T. R. Dawson in 1913 in problems published in the Cheltenham Examiner newspaper. Nowadays it is one of the most popular fairy pieces used in chess problems.


Movement

abcdefgh
8
h8 black cross
a7 black pawn
d7 black cross
g7 black king
b6 black pawn
d6 white pawn
d4 white upside-down queen
e4 white pawn
f4 white pawn
c3 white pawn
b2 black cross
d2 white king
d1 black cross
8
77
66
55
44
33
22
11
abcdefgh
The grasshopper (represented by an inverted queen) must hop over other pieces in order to move or capture. Here, it can move to any of the squares marked with a cross, or it can capture the pawn on a7.

In this article the grasshopper is shown as an inverted queen with notation G. In this diagram the white grasshopper on d4 can move to the squares marked with crosses (b2, d1, d7 and h8), as well as capture the black pawn on a7. It cannot move to g4, because there are two pieces to hop over.

Example problem

V. Onitiu, N. Petrović, T. R. Dawson
& C. M. Fox (1930)
abcdefgh
8
a8 black upside-down queen
f7 black upside-down queen
a2 black pawn
h2 black upside-down queen
a1 black king
c1 white king
h1 white upside-down queen
8
77
66
55
44
33
22
11
abcdefgh
White mates in 8 (with grasshoppers Ga8, f7, h2 and h1)

Solution:

1.Gh3! Gh4 2.Gh5 Gh6 3.Gh7 Gh8 4.Ge7 Gd7 5.Gc7 Gb7 6.Ga7+ Ga6 7.Ga5+ Ga4 8.Ga3#

Other related pieces in the problemist tradition are the eagle, hamster, moose, and sparrow, which move and capture like the grasshopper but are deflected 90°, 180°, 45°, and 135° respectively (to either side) upon passing the hurdle. The compound of all four and the grasshopper itself is the marguerite.[1]

See also

References

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