Fllg wrote on 07/07/11 at 07:00:29:
The name "Grünfeld Defence" is not at all uncommon these days.
True, both terms are seen today. The Grünfeld Defence wasn't "converted" into the G. Indian, in the sense that the old name disappeared. But by imbedding the Grünfeld into a larger entity of 1...Nf6 systems (T.'s defining criterium for "Indian"), it was logical to call Grünfeld's System "Indian", and it was only a question of time that it would come up, as an alternative.
Tartakower respected names introduced by others, and so he wrote "Grünfeld Defence", even if he didn't like it. As someone familiar with the chess literature, T. knew that the Indian
Moheschunder had played
1.d4 Nf6 2.c4 g6 3.Nc3 d5 in the 19th century. Tartakower took priority questions seriously, thus he often wrote "so-called Grünfeld Defence" or that Grünfeld had "adopted" the system. Can we regard
Indisch as his attempt to "heal" Grünfeld's mistake in a larger context? Anyway,
Indian described the Grünfeld D. as a bridge between the Indian and the QP systems. Tartakower (p. 27) calls the deferred move d7-d5 the
"Implantation des Damengambitknochens" [implantation of the Queen's Gambit's bone], a grim picture. Maybe suitable as cover picture of the next GI book.
Moreover, when we take into consideration that in those years player-related names like "Nimzowitsch Indian" or "Bogolyubov Indian" became popular, the analogous Grünfeld Indian was to be expected - sooner or later.
Smyslov_Fan wrote on 07/06/11 at 18:37:16:
I'm sure there's an older source than Alekhin, but he was one of the earliest to call Ernst Grunfeld's hybrid a "Grunfeld-Indian Defense". I was pretty sure it was in the first volume of My Best Games of Chess, 1908-1937, but I can't find it right now.
I have the 1908-1923 collection, reprinted from the 1927 edition. But there is no "Grünfeld Indian".
The earliest mention I find (after a quick search):
Lod. Prins: Grünfeld Verdediging en Schaakpractijk, Lochem
1941. Grünfeld was still alive, so Prins was careful to use the official name. But he slips on p.18: "[...] ten tijde van de introductie van Grünfeld-Indisch, omstreeks 1922, [...]"
Moderator (Smyslow_Fan), please import the opening bits from the terminology thread to this thread.