Maya Lomeinishvili ( Georgian. მაია ლომინეიშვილი ; born November 11, 1977 , Tbilisi ) - Georgian chess player , grandmaster among women ( 1996 ), international master among men ( 2003 ).
Maya Lomeinshvili | |
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მაია ლომინეიშვილი | |
In 2007 | |
Country | Georgia |
Birth name | |
Date of Birth | November 11, 1977 (41 years) |
Place of Birth | Tbilisi |
Rank | International Master ( 2003 ) ---- grandmaster ( 1996 ) among women International Master ( 1995 ) Women |
Current rating | 2342 (June 2019 ) |
Personal card on the FIDE website Personal card on the site Chess DB | |
Biography
She participated in the European Junior Chess Championships and World Junior Chess Championships in various age groups. In 1991, she won the European Junior Women's Chess Championship in the U14 age group. In subsequent years, she won three more awards: gold (European Junior Chess Championship in 1996 in the U20 group) and two bronze medals (in the World Junior Chess Championships in 1993 in the U16 group and in 1994 in the U18 group). In 1995 she made her debut in Chisinau in the zonal FIDE tournament, but took only 34th place [1] .
Two times she won medals at the World Chess Championships among female students: in 2000 she was the first in Varna , and in 1998 she was the second in Rotterdam [2] . In 2000, she won international women's chess tournaments in Batumi and in the German cities of Böblingen and Rodevish . She became the winner of the Georgian Women's Chess Championships six times (1993, 1996, 1998, 2002 - together with Ana Matnadze , 2009, 2011) [3] .
Participated in the Women's World Chess Championships :
- In 2004, in Elista, after winning the second round over Alisa Galliamova in the third round, she lost to her compatriot Nana Dzagnidze [4] ;
- In 2010, in Antakya , she lost to Anna Zatonskikh in the first round [5] .
She qualified for the Women's World Chess Championship in 2008 , which was held in Nalchik , but because of the armed conflict in South Ossetia, together with other Georgian chess players, she refused to take part in the tournament [6] .
Represented Georgia at three chess competitions (2004–2008), where she won the gold medal ( 2008 ) in the team competition, and won the bronze medal in the individual competition (2008), and at five European team chess championships (1997–2007), where the team competition won the silver medal (2005), and in the individual competition won the silver medal (2007), and at the World Team Chess Championship in 2009 .
Notes
Links
- Maya Lomeinshvili's personal card on the FIDE website
- Maya Lomeinshvili's games at
- Maya Lomeinshvili's personal card on the site 365chess.com (eng.)
- Maya Lomeinshvili speeches at chess competitions
- Maya Lomineyshvili speeches at the world team championships
- Maya Lomeinshvili speeches at the European team championships