Move him by the castle.
no he also cant move into check via castle
Absolutely, but the process involves a little different location of the moved Rook, depending if it is the Queen's rook or the King's rook.
Because it's against the rules.
Castling in chess is usually used to protect the king and/or begin the development of the rook. There are some restrictions. First, there can't be any pieces between the king and the rook. Second, you can't castle if you have already moved the king or the rook you want to castle with. Third, if the square beside the king and between the king and the rook is under attack, you cannot castle. (You'd be moving the king "across" an attacked square, which is not allowed.) Lastly, you cannot castle if your king is in check. (You cannot castle to get out of check.) To castle, first move the king two squares towards the rook on the side you wish to castle on. Then pick up the rook and put it on the square that king "passed over" when it was moved to castle.
Yes, it's true, but you don't switch places, they move to a certain place. So technically, that's a no. Castle Kingside(0-0): King moves from e1 to g1 FIRST, THEN Rook from h1 to f1. This is in the course of 1 move. Castle Queenside(0-0-0):King moves from e1 to c1 FIRST, THEN Rook from a1 to d1. This is also in the course of 1 move.
Castling involves both rook and King moving to their respective squares whether it be a King-side castle or queen-side castle . When castling , the king moves two squares towards the rook , and the rook moves over the king to the next square , i.e. , black's king on e8 and rook on a8 move to : king c8, rook d8 (Long Castling) , white's king on e1 and rook on h1 move to : king g1, rook f1 (Short castling) ~ look to the related link below for additional information regarding castling .
Incorrect: The castle in chess can move as any spaces desired right, left, up, or down, but not diagonally! There is another move called "castle king side". this is when the king and the castle in the same row and with no players in between them, and they switch places! ================== Answer: There seems to be some confusion, above, between the move to 'castle' and the piece that looks like a castle, but is actually named the 'rook.' The rook can move any number of spaces forward or back, or from side to side (providing that another piece is not blocking its way), but not diagonally. 'Castling' is a special move involving both the king and either one of the rooks. Castling can be done on either the king's side or the queen's side of the board. There are a few technicalities to the move that have been answered in other questions in this subcategory. It is not correct to say the pieces just switch places.
You can castle if you have been put in check previously in the game and removed the check without moving your king (either by blocking or capturing the opponent's piece). You cannot castle if: (a)you are currently in check; (b)you move your king through an attacked square on the board during the castle; or (c)you have moved your king or castling rook at any point in the game.
It really depends on what you're asking. When in check, the only legal moves are moves that would serve to get you out of check. If capturing the rook with your pawn would mean your king was no longer in check, then yes, the rook may be taken. If capturing the rook with your pawn would mean that your king would be in check by another piece, then no, the rook may not be taken.
No. But that is the usual reason for a King to castle (move left or right away from the center). When the King castles kingside (O-O), he arrives at KN1 (g1 or g8) behind the knight's pawn. This also develops the King's Rook.The castle queenside (O-O-O) is usually a defensive move if the kingside is under attack. Instead of moving 2 squares kingside (with rook jumping over), the king moves 2 squares toward the queenside, ending up at QB1.The player may castle at any time, provided that he has never moved the King or the Rook he is castling with. The rules of check provide that:1) The King cannot castle if he is in check2) The King cannot castle into check (final position)3) The King cannot castle "across" check (enemy attacking square the king crosses)It is, however, legal even if the rook being moved is under attack, as the King never passes or occupies the rook's position.
It was first said by William Shakespeare.