The first Nordic Chess Championship (Nordiska Schackkongressen) took place in Stockholm in 1897.
The winners in the Nordic Championship in 1934 and 1936, Aron Nimzowitsch and Erik Lundin, got the Nordiske kongresmestre title, as the champion 1930, Erik Andersen, defended his title with 3-3 against Gideon Ståhlberg at Copenhagen 1934 and lost it by 2½-3½ against Erik Lundin at Copenhagen 1937.
Several of the Nordic Championship have been arranged as part of an open tournament, where the best placed player from a Nordic country becomes Nordic Champion even if that person did not win the event. For example, the Nordic Champion of 2011, Jon Ludvig Hammer, finished fifth in the Reykjavik Open that doubled as the Nordic Championship since the four players who finished ahead of him were from Ukraine, the Netherlands, and Poland and were thus ineligible for the Nordic Champion title.
# | Year | City | Nordic champion |
---|---|---|---|
1 | 1897 | Stockholm | Sven Otto Svensson (Sweden) |
2 | 1899 | Copenhagen | Jørgen Møller (Denmark) |
3 | 1901 | Göteborg | Jørgen Møller (Denmark) |
4 | 1903 | Kristiania | Johannes Giersing (Denmark) |
5 | 1905 | Stockholm | A. H. Pettersson (Sweden) |
6 | 1907 | Copenhagen | Paul Saladin Leonhardt (German Empire) |
7 | 1909 | Göteborg | Milan Vidmar (Austria) |
8 | 1912 | Stockholm | Alexander Alekhine (Russian Empire) |
9 | 1916 | Copenhagen | Paul Johner (Switzerland) |
10 | 1917 | Kristiania | Gustaf Nyholm (Sweden) |
11 | 1919 | Göteborg | Rudolf Spielmann (Austria) Anton Olson (Sweden) |
12 | 1924 | Copenhagen | Aron Nimzowitsch (Denmark) |
13 | 1928 | Oslo | Karl Berndtsson (Sweden) |
14 | 1929 | Göteborg | Gideon Ståhlberg (Sweden) |
15 | 1930 | Stockholm | Erik Andersen (Denmark) |
16 | 1934 | Copenhagen | Aron Nimzowitsch (Denmark) *) |
*) | 1934 | Copenhagen | Erik Andersen (Denmark) |
17 | 1936 | Helsinki | Erik Lundin (Sweden) *) |
*) | 1937 | Copenhagen | Erik Lundin (Sweden) |
18 | 1938 | Örebro | Gideon Ståhlberg (Sweden) |
19 | 1939 | Oslo | Gideon Ståhlberg (Sweden) Erik Lundin (Sweden) |
20 | 1946 | Copenhagen | Osmo Kaila (Finland) |
21 | 1947 | Helsinki | Eero Böök (Finland) |
22 | 1948 | Örebro | Baldur Möller (Iceland) |
23 | 1950 | Reykjavík | Baldur Möller (Iceland) |
24 | 1953 | Esbjerg | Friðrik Ólafsson (Iceland) |
25 | 1955 | Oslo | Bent Larsen (Denmark) |
26 | 1957 | Helsinki | Olof Sterner (Sweden) |
27 | 1959 | Örebro | Svein Johannessen (Norway) |
28 | 1961 | Reykjavík | Ingi R. Johannsson (Iceland) |
29 | 1963 | Odense | Bjørn Brinck-Claussen (Denmark) Manne Joffe (Sweden) |
30 | 1965 | Oslo | Freysteinn Thorbergsson (Iceland) |
31 | 1967 | Hangö | Ragnar Hoen (Norway) |
32 | 1969 | Lidköping | Ole Jakobsen (Denmark) |
33 | 1971 | Reykjavík | Friðrik Ólafsson (Iceland) |
34 | 1973 | Grenå | Bent Larsen (Denmark) |
35 | 1975 | Sandefjord | Sejer Holm (Denmark) |
36 | 1977 | Kiljava | Lars-Erik Pettersson (Sweden) |
37 | 1979 | Sundsvall | Christer Niklasson (Sweden) |
38 | 1981 | Reykjavík | Knut Jøran Helmers (Norway) |
39 | 1983 | Esbjerg | Curt Hansen (Denmark) |
40 | 1985 | Gjøvik | Simen Agdestein (Norway) |
41 | 1987 | Tórshavn | Margeir Petursson (Iceland) |
42 | 1989 | Espoo | Simen Agdestein (Norway) |
43 | 1992 | Östersund | Simen Agdestein (Norway) |
44 | 1995 | Reykjavík | Curt Hansen (Denmark) |
45 | 1997 | Reykjavík | Jóhann Hjartarson (Iceland) |
46 | 1999 | Copenhagen | Tiger Hillarp Persson (Sweden) |
47 | 2001 | Bergen | Artur Kogan (Israel) Evgeny Agrest (Sweden) |
48 | 2003 | Aarhus | Evgeny Agrest (Sweden) Curt Hansen (Denmark) |
49 | 2005 | Vammala | Evgeny Agrest (Sweden) |
50 | 2007 | Copenhagen | Emanuel Berg (Sweden) |
51 | 2009 | Copenhagen | Peter Heine Nielsen (Denmark) |
52 | 2011 | Reykjavík | Jon Ludvig Hammer (Norway) |
53 | 2013 | Køge | Axel Smith (Sweden) |