Pawn (chess)

White pawn
Black pawn

The pawn (♙♟) is the weakest piece in the game of chess. They represent infantry. Each player starts the game with eight pawns, one on each square of the second row (or rank) from the view of the player. In the white pawns start on a2, b2, c2, ..., h2, while the black pawns start on a7, b7, c7, ..., h7.

Moving

Pawns move differently than other pieces. Unlike all the other pieces, pawns cannot move backwards. Most of the time, a pawn moves by going up a single square, but the first time each pawn is moved from its starting place, it can go forward two squares. Pawns cannot use the first two-square move to jump over a square with another piece on it or to capture. Any piece in front of a pawn, white or black, stops its moving. If a pawn touches the other side it is exchanged by either a queen, a rook, a bishop or a knight.

Capturing

Start of chess board.
a8 black king b8 black king c8 black king d8 black king e8 black king f8 black king g8 black king [[Image:chess

d44.png|22px|alt=h8 black king|link=]]

a7 black king b7 black king c7 black king d7 black king e7 black king f7 black king g7 black king [[Image:chess

l44.png|22px|alt=h7 black king|link=]]

a6 black king b6 black king c6 black king d6 black king e6 black king f6 black king g6 black king [[Image:chess

d44.png|22px|alt=h6 black king|link=]]

a5 __ b5 __ c5 __ d5 black rook e5 black bishop f5 black knight g5 __ [[Image:chess __

l44.png|22px|alt=h5 __|link=]]

a4 __ b4 __ c4 __ d4 __ e4 white pawn f4 __ g4 __ [[Image:chess __

d44.png|22px|alt=h4 __|link=]]

a3 black king b3 black king c3 black king d3 black king e3 black king f3 black king g3 black king [[Image:chess

l44.png|22px|alt=h3 black king|link=]]

a2 black king b2 black king c2 black king d2 black king e2 black king f2 black king g2 black king [[Image:chess

d44.png|22px|alt=h2 black king|link=]]

a1 black king b1 black king c1 black king d1 black king e1 black king f1 black king g1 black king [[Image:chess

l44.png|22px|alt=h1 black king|link=]]

End of chess board.
The pawn can capture the rook or the knight

The white pawn at e4 can capture either the black rook at d5 or the black knight at f5, but not the bishop at e5, which blocks its straight way forward. Unlike other pieces, the pawn does not capture in the same way as it moves. A pawn captures diagonally, one square forward and to the left or right. In the diagram to the left, the white pawn can capture either the black rook or the black knight.

En passant

An even more unusual move is the en passant capture. Script error: No such module "Chessboard".

En passant happens when a pawn uses its first-move option to move two squares forward instead of one. If it passes over a square guarded by an enemy pawn, that pawn can take the first pawn "in passing" as if the first pawn had moved forward only one square. The taking pawn moves into the empty square over which the first pawn moved. The first pawn is removed from the board. To capture en passant can only be done on the move right after the double-square pawn advance. Otherwise the chance is lost.

The en passant move was added in late fifteenth-century Europe, to make up for the then newly added two-square first move rule. We have no record of why the rule was added, but it is easy to see that it works to prevent the position becoming blocked and uninteresting.

Promotion

Once a pawn reaches the other side of the board and cannot move further, it is promoted, meaning it can become any other piece on the board, except the king. Players usually promote their pawns to a queen because it is the next most-powerful piece on the board.

History

Chess pieces
Chess kdt45.svg King Chess klt45.svg
Chess qdt45.svg Queen Chess qlt45.svg
Chess rdt45.svg Rook Chess rlt45.svg
Chess bdt45.svg Bishop Chess blt45.svg
Chess ndt45.svg Knight Chess nlt45.svg
Chess pdt45.svg Pawn Chess plt45.svg

As the simplest piece in chess, the pawn was in the oldest version of chess, Chaturanga. It is present in all other types of chess around the world.

The changes which took place in the fifteenth century were aimed at allowing the pieces to develop faster, and make the game more exciting.