The Turk

the life and times of the famous eighteenth-century chess-playing machine

272 pages

English language

Published May 15, 2003 by Berkley Books.

ISBN:
978-0-425-19039-5
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In the annals of man and machine, The Turk has to rank among the most astonishing stories. In 1769, Baron Von Kempelen, engineer to the Imperial Court in Vienna, was so unimpressed by the performance of a visiting conjurer that he boasted he could do better. He built a mechanical chess-playing mannequin, dressed like a Turk, capable of beating even the Court's best players. Over the next decades, the Turk toured the courts of Europe to tremendous acclaim. Amid the craze for automata that swept Europe during the late 18th and early 19th centuries, as the Industrial Revolution developed, it was one of the wonders of its time: Benjamin Franklin and Napoleon were among the luminaries who lost to it. Eventually, the Turk ended up in America, where it toured for many years before being destroyed by a fire in 1854. But was it a fraud? The colorful story of …

1 edition

Subjects

  • Kempelen, Wolfgang von, 1734-1804
  • Mälzel, Johann Nepomuk, 1772-1838
  • Automaton chess players