Viktor Korchnoi (born March 23, 1931, Leningrad, Russia, U.S.S.R. [now St. Petersburg, Russia]—died June 6, 2016, Wohlen, Switzerland) was a world chess champion contender who was one of the fiercest competitors in the history of chess. During his prime years he was known as “Viktor the Terrible.”
As a youngster, Korchnoi lived through the World War II siege of Leningrad (1941–43). He became a Soviet chess master in 1951, an international master in 1954, and an international grandmaster in 1956. In the years from 1960 to 1970, he won four U.S.S.R. championships—by far the strongest national chess championships in the world during those years.
In 1974 Korchnoi lost a chess match to his countryman Anatoly Karpov to determine Bobby Fischer’s challenger for the world title. When Fischer declined to defend his title, Karpov became world champion by default. In 1978 he lost a long, grueling return match with Karpov for the world championship by a score of 5 wins to 6 losses. (The match’s 21 draws did not count.) In 1981 he lost again to Karpov.
In 1976 Korchnoi had sought political asylum in the Netherlands; he later became a citizen of Switzerland. Korchnoi’s wife and son were refused exit visas until the mid-1980s, and his son was jailed shortly before the 1981 match after attempting to emigrate.
From 1954 to 1990, Korchnoi played in about 70 international chess tournaments and won or shared first place 40 times. He came in lower than third place only seven times in his career. A rarity among chess masters, he continued to compete in strong grandmaster tournaments well past middle age.