Xie Jun: the champion who opened China to the chess world
- País
- 🇨🇳 China
- Título
- Grandmaster (GM)
- Nacimiento
- 30 October 1970, Beijing, China
- Estado
- retirada
- ELO máximo
- 2517 · jan 2001
- Campeón del mundo
- 1991-1996, 1999-2001
Before China dominated world women’s chess, someone had to open the door. Xie Jun did it in 1991, when she won the Women’s World Championship and set in motion a revolution that continues to this day.
Who is Xie Jun
She was born on 30 October 1970 in Beijing. China had little chess tradition at the time, but the government bet on chess as a tool for international prestige. Xie Jun was the first great beneficiary of that bet.
The 1991 revolution
In 1991, Xie Jun defeated reigning champion Maia Chiburdanidze and became China’s first Women’s World Champion. It was an earthquake: it broke decades of Soviet/Georgian dominance and proved China could compete at the highest level.
Xie Jun won the title twice (1991-1996 and 1999-2001), consolidating the Chinese model of chess development.
The legacy
Since Xie Jun’s win, China has produced an uninterrupted succession of world champions: Zhu Chen, Xu Yuhua, Hou Yifan, Tan Zhongyi, and Ju Wenjun. All of them are heirs to the door Xie Jun opened.
Her chess DNA
In our chess DNA system, Xie Jun represents the balanced pioneer profile: no extremes, with a solid base across every axis. If your GM twin is Xie Jun, your strength lies in versatility and the ability to open paths where none existed.
Keep exploring
- Hou Yifan, her most brilliant heir
- Maia Chiburdanidze, the champion she defeated
- Ju Wenjun, the current Chinese champion
- All players
Preguntas frecuentes
What impact did Xie Jun's 1991 win have?
When Xie Jun won the Women's World Championship in 1991, breaking Soviet/Georgian dominance, she sparked a revolution. China invested massively in women's chess, and since then the country has produced a succession of champions: Zhu Chen, Xu Yuhua, Hou Yifan, Tan Zhongyi, and Ju Wenjun. Xie Jun opened the door.
What was her playing style like?
Xie Jun was a balanced player with a good tactical base. Her main strength was in the combination of competitive energy and technical soundness. She didn't rely on a single resource: she could attack, defend, and maneuver in endgames effectively.