Turkey’s one-of-a-kind chess museum builds a world in miniature



The war between Napoleon Bonaparte and the British, renowned battles in the Ottoman period, blockbusters like the Lord of the Rings and Star Wars, and even the iconic cartoon series Smurfs and Asterix, to name a few of the sets on display in the Gokyay Foundation Chess Museum, which houses 727 chess sets collected from 110 countries.

Some sets from China are particularly interesting, such as the chessmen replica of the Terracotta Warriors.

Its curator and founder Akin Gokyay, 82, is a lawyer by profession. Although his passion for chess dates back years, he had never expected that his collection would be rich enough to fill a museum and set a Guinness World Record.

“In 1975 when I was traveling in Milan, Italy, I saw and bought a beautiful chess set. I wasn’t intent on starting a collection,” he told the Xinhua News Agency in an interview.

“It started with one set and grew to five, 10, and 20 sets over time. Then during every foreign visit, I started looking for different chess sets reflecting the culture, history, and values of the countries where my many travels took me,” said Gokyay.

Eventually, as the collection grew, his wife suggested he should share them with the public, and that became the first step toward the museum.

The museum straddles a 1,000-square-meter area within an old house in Hamamonu, a touristic area of the Turkish capital city. It received a Guinness World Record for the largest chess collection in the world in 2012, and was titled “the best museum of Ankara” in 2017.

Every year, new sets are meticulously chosen for their material and thematic novelty and added to the impressive collection.

One of the more recent ones is a set by a Turkish designer whose idea was to create a piece that might have been played between cavemen, so it is made simply of pebble stones.

Gokyay said that chess stimulates analytical thinking in children and has the unique symbolic meaning of peace.

“You can play chess with someone you don’t know and don’t share the language. You can still play chess for hours. It is a very civilized thing,” the curator stressed.

Source : GlobalTimes

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