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Rook (chess) - Simple English Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

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White rook

Black rook

Chess pieces
King
Queen
Rook
Bishop
Knight
Pawn

A rook (from Persian رخ rokh) is a piece in the board game of chess. It gets its name from its name in the old Indo-Persian game (see History of chess). Each player starts the game with two rooks. When recording games, it is shortened to R, and when printed a figurine is used.

Moves of the rook

abcdefgh
8

d8 black cross

g8 white circle

a7 white circle

b7 white circle

c7 white circle

d7 white cross

e7 white circle

f7 white circle

g7 white rook

h7 white circle

d6 black cross

g6 white circle

a5 black cross

b5 black cross

c5 black cross

d5 black rook

e5 black cross

f5 black cross

g5 white cross

h5 black cross

d4 black cross

g4 white circle

d3 black cross

g3 white circle

d2 black cross

g2 white circle

d1 black cross

g1 white circle

8
77
66
55
44
33
22
11
abcdefgh

In chess notation, the white rooks start on the a1 and h1 squares, and the black rooks start on the a8 and h8 squares.

The rook moves forward or back on the files through any number of squares without other pieces on them, and sideways on the ranks. This is shown in the diagram below. Like other pieces, it captures by going into the square on which an enemy piece stands.

The rook and king also take part in a special move called castling.

A chess castling move