artificial castling
chess maneuver in which a king which has lost the right to castle achieves a castled position in several normal moves, instead of the one special move
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artificial castling
Summary
artificial castling is a chess term[1]. It draws 11 Wikipedia views per month (chess_term category, ranking #40 of 56).[2]
Key Facts
- artificial castling's instance of is recorded as chess term[3].
- castling is named after artificial castling[4].
- artificial castling's subclass of is recorded as chess defense[5].
- artificial castling's subclass of is recorded as chess maneuver[6].
- artificial castling's subclass of is recorded as chess tactic[7].
- artificial castling's part of is recorded as chess terminology[8].
- artificial castling's sport is recorded as chess[9].
- artificial castling's Freebase ID is recorded as /m/06qnfw[10].
Why It Matters
artificial castling draws 11 Wikipedia views per month (chess_term category, ranking #40 of 56).[2] It has Wikipedia articles in 8 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[11]