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See also: American See also: chess player, was See also: born in New See also: Orleans,
See also: Louisiana, on the 22nd of See also: June 1837, the son of Alonzo See also: Morphy (1798–1856) and his wife, whose See also: maiden name was Le Carpentier
.
The See also: father, the son of a well-to-do See also: Spanish immigrant, was a prominent jurist and legislator and, like his See also: brother Ernest, passionately fond of chess
.
Learning the moves from his father at the age of ten, See also: Paul gave evidence of such extraordinary precocity that in less than two years he was able to defeat all the amateurs of his native city
.
While still at school he competed successfully with such strong players as See also: Eugene See also: Rousseau and the Hungarian master J
.
Lowenthal
.
He attended the Jesuit
See also: college of St See also: Joseph at Spring See also: Hill,
See also: Alabama, and applied himself to the study of the See also: law, being admitted to the See also: bar of Louisiana in 1858
.
During the autumn of 1857 he took See also: part in the first American chess congress at New See also: York, winning the first prize from sixteen competitors, including the well-known L
.
See also: Paulsen
.
Morphy went to See also: Europe in the spring of 1858 and entered upon a series of triumphs, both in See also: regular mat9ches and in blindfold See also: play, that proved him to be one of the best players of the See also: time
.
The winter of 1858–1859 was passed in See also: Paris, where he was destined to gain his greatest triumphs, practically winning the championship of the See also: world by beating Adolf Anderssen, champion of See also: Germany, by a score of 7–2, with two See also: games See also: drawn
.
Another feat was his simultaneous blindfold match against eight strong French players, six of whom he defeated
.
At this time he was in his twenty-second See also: year
.
Returning to the See also: United States in 1859, he in-tended to establish himself in the practice of the law at New Orleans, but the outbreak of the See also: Civil War frustrated these plans
.
His devotion to chess had already begun to affect his See also: health
.
He spent the year 1863 in Paris, returning to New Orleans in 1864, but his health was now permanently impaired
.
He became insane, and at last he died in New Orleans in 1884
.
See Exploits and Triumphs of Paul Morphy, by F
.
M
.
Edge (New York, 1859) ; Morphy's Games, edited by J
.
Lowenthal (New York, 186o) ; Paul Morphy, by Max See also: Lange (See also: Leipzig, 1881)
.
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