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King or Queen-Which piece is which?


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1















I recently bought a set of wooden chess pieces, which I liked for it's simplicity.



However, I'm not sure which one is supposed to be the king and which one is supposed to be the queen.



I would say that the one with the spike is the queen, and the one more flat is the king. Am I right, or is it the opposite?



enter image description here










share|improve this question





























    1















    I recently bought a set of wooden chess pieces, which I liked for it's simplicity.



    However, I'm not sure which one is supposed to be the king and which one is supposed to be the queen.



    I would say that the one with the spike is the queen, and the one more flat is the king. Am I right, or is it the opposite?



    enter image description here










    share|improve this question



























      1












      1








      1








      I recently bought a set of wooden chess pieces, which I liked for it's simplicity.



      However, I'm not sure which one is supposed to be the king and which one is supposed to be the queen.



      I would say that the one with the spike is the queen, and the one more flat is the king. Am I right, or is it the opposite?



      enter image description here










      share|improve this question
















      I recently bought a set of wooden chess pieces, which I liked for it's simplicity.



      However, I'm not sure which one is supposed to be the king and which one is supposed to be the queen.



      I would say that the one with the spike is the queen, and the one more flat is the king. Am I right, or is it the opposite?



      enter image description here







      queens kings






      share|improve this question















      share|improve this question













      share|improve this question




      share|improve this question








      edited 5 hours ago









      Rewan Demontay

      1,233731




      1,233731










      asked 9 hours ago









      Sembei NorimakiSembei Norimaki

      1184




      1184






















          2 Answers
          2






          active

          oldest

          votes


















          2














          In general, a chess set has the king as the tallest piece, followed by queen, bishop, knight, rook and pawn in that order. Notice in the starting position how the piece height decreases smoothly from the centre to the edge. (Also, when buying a chess set, usually the height of the king is given as a guide to the size of the chessmen.)



          Thus I would say the king is the taller of the two pieces, which from your picture looks to be the one with the spike on the left.



          This ordering of height may not hold for particularly ornate decorative sets.



          However, if you're not going to use the set to play against other people in tournaments (where usually Staunton pieces are mandated anyway), the correct answer would probably be: the king is whichever piece you think it is.






          share|improve this answer































            1














            The piece on the right clearly reminds me of kings from German "Bundesform" piece sets, which are still occasionally used in Germany, although very rarely in tournament play. The left piece does not exactly look like a "Bundesform" queen, but it is still somehow similar.






            share|improve this answer
























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              2 Answers
              2






              active

              oldest

              votes








              2 Answers
              2






              active

              oldest

              votes









              active

              oldest

              votes






              active

              oldest

              votes









              2














              In general, a chess set has the king as the tallest piece, followed by queen, bishop, knight, rook and pawn in that order. Notice in the starting position how the piece height decreases smoothly from the centre to the edge. (Also, when buying a chess set, usually the height of the king is given as a guide to the size of the chessmen.)



              Thus I would say the king is the taller of the two pieces, which from your picture looks to be the one with the spike on the left.



              This ordering of height may not hold for particularly ornate decorative sets.



              However, if you're not going to use the set to play against other people in tournaments (where usually Staunton pieces are mandated anyway), the correct answer would probably be: the king is whichever piece you think it is.






              share|improve this answer




























                2














                In general, a chess set has the king as the tallest piece, followed by queen, bishop, knight, rook and pawn in that order. Notice in the starting position how the piece height decreases smoothly from the centre to the edge. (Also, when buying a chess set, usually the height of the king is given as a guide to the size of the chessmen.)



                Thus I would say the king is the taller of the two pieces, which from your picture looks to be the one with the spike on the left.



                This ordering of height may not hold for particularly ornate decorative sets.



                However, if you're not going to use the set to play against other people in tournaments (where usually Staunton pieces are mandated anyway), the correct answer would probably be: the king is whichever piece you think it is.






                share|improve this answer


























                  2












                  2








                  2







                  In general, a chess set has the king as the tallest piece, followed by queen, bishop, knight, rook and pawn in that order. Notice in the starting position how the piece height decreases smoothly from the centre to the edge. (Also, when buying a chess set, usually the height of the king is given as a guide to the size of the chessmen.)



                  Thus I would say the king is the taller of the two pieces, which from your picture looks to be the one with the spike on the left.



                  This ordering of height may not hold for particularly ornate decorative sets.



                  However, if you're not going to use the set to play against other people in tournaments (where usually Staunton pieces are mandated anyway), the correct answer would probably be: the king is whichever piece you think it is.






                  share|improve this answer













                  In general, a chess set has the king as the tallest piece, followed by queen, bishop, knight, rook and pawn in that order. Notice in the starting position how the piece height decreases smoothly from the centre to the edge. (Also, when buying a chess set, usually the height of the king is given as a guide to the size of the chessmen.)



                  Thus I would say the king is the taller of the two pieces, which from your picture looks to be the one with the spike on the left.



                  This ordering of height may not hold for particularly ornate decorative sets.



                  However, if you're not going to use the set to play against other people in tournaments (where usually Staunton pieces are mandated anyway), the correct answer would probably be: the king is whichever piece you think it is.







                  share|improve this answer












                  share|improve this answer



                  share|improve this answer










                  answered 7 hours ago









                  RemellionRemellion

                  1,2511325




                  1,2511325























                      1














                      The piece on the right clearly reminds me of kings from German "Bundesform" piece sets, which are still occasionally used in Germany, although very rarely in tournament play. The left piece does not exactly look like a "Bundesform" queen, but it is still somehow similar.






                      share|improve this answer




























                        1














                        The piece on the right clearly reminds me of kings from German "Bundesform" piece sets, which are still occasionally used in Germany, although very rarely in tournament play. The left piece does not exactly look like a "Bundesform" queen, but it is still somehow similar.






                        share|improve this answer


























                          1












                          1








                          1







                          The piece on the right clearly reminds me of kings from German "Bundesform" piece sets, which are still occasionally used in Germany, although very rarely in tournament play. The left piece does not exactly look like a "Bundesform" queen, but it is still somehow similar.






                          share|improve this answer













                          The piece on the right clearly reminds me of kings from German "Bundesform" piece sets, which are still occasionally used in Germany, although very rarely in tournament play. The left piece does not exactly look like a "Bundesform" queen, but it is still somehow similar.







                          share|improve this answer












                          share|improve this answer



                          share|improve this answer










                          answered 7 hours ago









                          Fabian FichterFabian Fichter

                          73069




                          73069






























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