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Emil Joseph (Josef) Diemer (15 May 1908, in Radolfzell – 10 October 1990, in Fussbach/ Gengenbach) was a German
chess Chess is a board game for two players. It is an abstract strategy game that involves Perfect information, no hidden information and no elements of game of chance, chance. It is played on a square chessboard, board consisting of 64 squares arran ...
master.


Biography

Emil Joseph Diemer was born in 1908 in the German town Radolfzell, in Baden. In 1931, he was out of work and joined the German
Nazi Party The Nazi Party, officially the National Socialist German Workers' Party ( or NSDAP), was a far-right politics, far-right political party in Germany active between 1920 and 1945 that created and supported the ideology of Nazism. Its precursor ...
, where he became an active member. He was present at all important international chess events, and became the "chess reporter of the Great German Reich". His articles often appeared in Nazi publications.Hans Ree. Dutch Treat: Emil Joseph Diemer. Chess Cafe Archives. URL: http://www.chesscafe.com/text/hans07.pdf . Accessed Oct 2012. In 1942–1943, he played correspondence and tournament games with
Klaus Junge Klaus Junge (1 January 1924 – 17 April 1945) was a Chilean-German chess master who was among the world's leading players during World War II. An officer in the Wehrmacht, he died during the Battle of Hamburg (1945), Battle of Welle shortly bef ...
.Chessgames.com> Biography of Emil Joseph Diemer. URL: http://www.chessgames.com/perl/chessplayer?pid=29926 . Accessed Oct 2012. After the war, he continued his chess journalism, sold chess books, and gave simuls, but the stigma of his Nazi past made it difficult to support himself in this way. As a middle-tier master, his successes in chess were few. In 1953, he was expelled from the German Chess Federation, whose officials he had accused, in a press campaign, of "homosexuality and corruption of innocent youth". It was not until 1956, in the
Netherlands , Terminology of the Low Countries, informally Holland, is a country in Northwestern Europe, with Caribbean Netherlands, overseas territories in the Caribbean. It is the largest of the four constituent countries of the Kingdom of the Nether ...
, that Diemer finally enjoyed real success, winning the Reserves Group of the Hoogovens tournament and later the Open Championship of the Netherlands. He became less interested in chess, and increasingly interested in Nostradamus, the 16th-century French
clairvoyant Clairvoyance (; ) is the claimed ability to acquire information that would be considered impossible to get through scientifically proven sensations, thus classified as extrasensory perception, or "sixth sense". Any person who is claimed to ...
: he claimed to have cracked Nostradamus's secret code, and over 25 years is said to have mailed over 10,000 letters on the subject. In 1965, he was committed to a psychiatric clinic in Gengenbach. The clinic's director, believing that chess was excessively stressful for Diemer, banned him from playing the game. In 1971, however, this ban was rescinded, and Diemer's membership in the German Chess Federation was also reinstated. Diemer then played first board as a member of a German chess club team. Still lacking financial independence, however, he continued to reside in Gengenbach as a semi-residential patient of the hospital until the end of his life. Diemer played many unorthodox openings, like the '' Diemer–Duhm Gambit'' (1.d4 d5 2.e4 e6 3.c4) and the '' Alapin–Diemer Gambit'' (1.d4 e6 2.e4 d5 3.Be3), but is most famous for his refinements to an old idea by Armand Edward Blackmar (1. d4 d5 2. e4 dxe4 3. f3), commonly known as the Blackmar–Diemer Gambit (1. d4 d5 2. e4 dxe4 3. Nc3 Nf6 4. f3). Diemer died in Gengenbach in 1990 at the age of 82.


Literature

* Georg Studier, ''Emil Josef Diemer. Ein Leben für das Schach im Spiegel der Zeiten'', Manfred Maedler Verlag 1996 (Germany) * Dany Senechaud, ''Emil J. Diemer, missionnaire des échecs acrobatiques'', Poitiers 1997 (France), 2003 (3rd ed.)Misjonarz atakującej gry Emil Josef Diemer


References


External links


The games of Emil Diemer
{{DEFAULTSORT:Diemer, Emil Joseph 1908 births 1990 deaths People from Radolfzell Sportspeople from Freiburg (region) People from the Grand Duchy of Baden Chess theoreticians 20th-century German chess players German chess players