Chess symbols in Unicode
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Instead of using images, one can represent chess pieces by symbols that are defined in the Unicode character set. This makes it possible to:
- Use Figurine Algebraic Notation, which replaces the letter that stands for a piece by its symbol, e.g. ♞c6 instead of Nc6. This enables the moves to be read independent of language (Algebraic Chess Notation lists the different names and letter abbreviations of pieces in several languages).
- Produce the symbols using a text editor or word processor rather than a graphics editor.
In order to display or print these symbols, one has to have a one or more fonts with good Unicode support installed on the computer, and the document (Web page, word processor document, etc.) must use one of these fonts.[1]
The following are symbols of chess pieces in Unicode.
| Name | Symbol | Codepoint | HTML |
|---|---|---|---|
| white king | ♔ | U+2654 | ♔ |
| white queen | ♕ | U+2655 | ♕ |
| white rook | ♖ | U+2656 | ♖ |
| white bishop | ♗ | U+2657 | ♗ |
| white knight | ♘ | U+2658 | ♘ |
| white pawn | ♙ | U+2659 | ♙ |
| black king | ♚ | U+265A | ♚ |
| black queen | ♛ | U+265B | ♛ |
| black rook | ♜ | U+265C | ♜ |
| black bishop | ♝ | U+265D | ♝ |
| black knight | ♞ | U+265E | ♞ |
| black pawn | ♟ | U+265F | ♟ |
If you cannot see any chess symbols in the above table, take a look at the picture below, which shows how the symbols look in two fonts (Arial Unicode MS and Tahoma).

