Moldovian ‘Latvian’ Pattern: 32 unweighted analysis chess pieces with folding original vintage board, wood, Soviet Era, c.1960-1970
Height; King 7.3cm, weight 6g, base width 2.8cm; Queen 6cm, wt 6g, Bishop 5.2cm 4g, Knight 5cm 6g, Rook 4cm 5g, Pawns 3.7cm 3g.
W: antiqued beige felt pads; B: same
Board Size: 30cm x 30cm. Squares are 3cm. Original stencil artwork on the front and interior commemorating the opening of the Moscow Space Park and Museum in 1964. See my Facebook page The Chess Schach for more info! All in all, a perfect lightweight travel companion and a great gift for a young student of the game or budding historian/collector.
This famous Soviet design was once said to be “a favourite” of the legendary ‘magician from Riga’ – Mikhail Tal – which is why the set is sometimes confusingly called the ‘Latvian’ set. I make use of the term ‘famous’ because just recently a slightly larger version of this timeless Cold War pattern was used in the hit mini-series, THE QUEEN’S GAMBIT, although this particular design appeared a few decades earlier than the late 1980s version used by Beth Harmon in the nail-biting finale of episode seven.
The trademark ‘elbow’ or ‘S’ shape of the Moldovian knights have a stark simplicity about them and carry a ‘lean’ that is seen in another famous set named after Tal. The bishops, too, have an equally simple ‘tear-drop’ shaped dome that can only be inspired by Moscow’s Saint Basil’s Cathedral erected during the reign of Ivan the Terrible in the 16th century with “…its towering domes shaped like the flames of a bonfire rising into the sky” (A. Ivanov, The Tsars p.100). Also of note here is that the Royal’s finials are of the traditional “Latvian” design, as opposed to the ‘diamond’ and ‘bonnet’ pattern of the two similar sets listed in the gallery recently.
The set also comes with our unique ‘Certificate of Artistry’ which will be posted separately once we tally up how many listings passed through our galleries in 2021 – “All good things …” as the wise man once said…

The Monochrome Set: Soviet ‘Mordovian Style’ Gulag Chessmen, c.1955
Rufus et Albus; Soviet GM4 "Champion" Cold War Chess Set, c.1980
Ovolo Militaris (The Oval Officers); Soviet ‘Egg & Dart’ Chess Set, c.1955
Et Densi (‘Tusk’); Weighted Soviet Carbolite Chess Set, c.1965-1975
Tartari (The Mongols); Central Asian ‘Folk-Art’ Chess Set, c.1980-1990
Cardinalis d’Griseo (The Grey Cardinals) Soviet/Russian Chess Set c.1975
Alumni (The Scholars); Soviet ‘Shkolnik’ Metal Chess Set, c.1960
Drueke’s American-Made Chessmen, No.22, c.1955-1965
Erectii Rus (Soviet Upright); Small Weighted Averbakh Chess Set, Stalin Era, c.1940-1953
Comrade Druekski (Soviet Drueke); Latvian ‘Staunton’ Plastic Chess Set, c.1960-1975
Stabulum Victores (‘Champions of the Dorm’); Soviet ‘Averbakh Style’ Egg-Bishop Chess set, c.1950s
✨SET OF THE MONTH✨ Mordor (Field of Shadows); Classic Mordovian U.S.S.R. Chessmen with Hand-Painted Board, c.1952
Dogues of War (Domini Bellum); Rare Soviet Analysis Chess Set, c.1945
The Whiteheads (Albo Capita); Reimagined Soviet ‘Young Pioneers’ Analysis Set, c.1960s
Farceurs Enragé (Jokers Wild); Faux Silver and Bronze Hand-Painted French Chess Set, c.1970
Octigenti (The Eight); Soviet Drueke Influenced “Kremlin” Chess Set, c.1960s
Draconis (The Jackals); Soviet Tournament & Club Set, c.1945-1955
Fandangi Militibus (The Dancing Army); Spanish Escardibul “Ajedrez Stawton No.5” Chess Set, c.1960-1975
Régence de la Habsburg; French ‘Regency’ Style Wooden Chess Set, c.1930s
Nekva’s Legacy: Austrian ‘Old Vienna’ Coffee House Chess Set, post-WWI
Alto Reges (The High-Kings); Soviet Upright Metal Chess Set, c.1960 













