Skip to content
Surf Wiki
Save to docs
economics

From Surf Wiki (app.surf) — the open knowledge base

Ju Wenjun

Chinese chess grandmaster (born 1991)


Chinese chess grandmaster (born 1991)

FieldValue
nameJu Wenjun
居文君
imageJu Wenjun in 2024 (cropped).jpg
captionJu Wenjun at the Tata Steel Chess Tournament 2024
full_name
country
birth_date
birth_placeShanghai, China
titleGrandmaster (2014)
womensworldchampion2018–present (2018, 2018, 2020, 2023, 2025)
peakrating2604 (March 2017)
FideID8603006

居文君

Ju Wenjun (; born 31 January 1991) is a Chinese chess grandmaster. She is the reigning five-time Women's World Champion, the reigning Women's World Blitz Chess Champion, and a two-time Women's World Rapid Chess Champion. In March 2017, she became the fifth woman to achieve a rating of 2600. She first won the title of Women's World Chess Champion in May 2018. She then defended her title in November 2018, 2020, 2023, and 2025.

Career

Ju started learning to play chess at the age of seven.

In December 2004, Ju Wenjun placed third in the Asian Women's Chess Championship in Beirut. This result qualified her to play in her first Women's World Chess Championship in 2006. She competed in this event also in 2008, 2010, 2012, 2015 and 2017.

She won the Women's Chinese Chess Championship in 2010 and 2014. In July 2011 she won the Hangzhou Women Grandmaster Chess Tournament undefeated with a score of 6½/9 points, ahead of the then women's world champion Hou Yifan. In October 2011 she took the second place at the Nalchik stage of the FIDE Women's Grand Prix 2011–12 with 7/11, ranked only after her compatriot Zhao Xue; her performance was enough to acquire her third and final norm required for the Grandmaster title. However, one of the three norms was missing the signature of the arbiter, disqualifying her for consideration for the title.

From June 18 to July 2, 2014, in the 5th stage of the FIDE Women's Grand Prix 2013–14 held in Lopota Resort, Georgia she finished jointly second with Elina Danielian and a 7/11 score. This marks her fourth GM norm. In the 6th stage of the FIDE Women's Grand Prix 2013–14 held in Sharjah, United Arab Emirates, from August 24 to September 7, 2014 she placed joint first with Hou Yifan with a score of 8½/11, winning the event thanks to a better tiebreak score.

In November 2014, FIDE awarded her the GM title in the 4th quarter Presidential Board meeting in Sochi, Russia. With six GM norms, including three norms from the Women's Grand Prix (1 from each series), she became China's 31st grandmaster and the 31st woman to hold the title. Also in 2014, she tied for first with Lei Tingjie in the 4th China Women Masters Tournament in Wuxi.

In December 2017, Ju won the Women's World Rapid Chess Championship in Riyadh, and won in the same championship held in St. Petersburg in December 2018, scoring 11½/15 (+8=7) and 10/12 (+8=4), respectively.

Ju earned the biggest win of her career in the fifth round of the Tata Steel Chess Tournament 2024, defeating then world number 6 Alireza Firouzja. She also drew World Champion Ding Liren in the final round, and eventually finished the tournament in 10th with 4½/13 (+1−5=7), gaining 9.7 rating points.

In December 2024 she won the Women's World Blitz Chess Championship.

FIDE championship

Ju Wenjun won FIDE Women's Grand Prix 2015–16. This qualified her for a match for the Women's World Chess Championship 2017 against incumbent champion Tan Zhongyi. Ju won the match with a score of 5½–4½ in May 2018, becoming the Women's World Chess Champion.

The next Women's World Chess Championship was decided by a 64-player knockout tournament. Ju won the tournament, which was held in November 2018, retaining her title. Since then, she has defended her title in matches three times: first against Aleksandra Goryachkina in the Women's World Chess Championship 2020 (6–6; 2½–1½ in tiebreaks), then against Lei Tingjie in the Women's World Chess Championship 2023 (6½–5½), and most recently in the Women's World Chess Championship 2025 (6½–2½) against Tan Zhongyi.

Team events

Ju Wenjun has played for the Chinese national women's team since 2008. Her team has won the gold medal in the 42nd Chess Olympiad in 2016, Women's World Team Chess Championship in 2009 and 2011, Women's Asian Nations Chess Cup in 2012, 2014 and 2016, gold medal in the Olympiad at 2018, and 2010 Asian Games.

In 2013, she won the silver medal with team Shanghai in the Asian Cities Chess Championship in Dubai.

She plays for the Shanghai chess club in the China Chess League (CCL).

Personal life

Ju graduated from Shanghai University of Finance and Economics in 2015.

References

References

  1. [https://ratings.fide.com/crt/main218973.jpg WGM title application]. FIDE.
  2. [https://chess24.com/en/read/news/goryachkina-6th-woman-ever-to-cross-2600 "Goryachkina 6th woman ever to cross 2600"]. ''[[chess24]]''. 2021.
  3. "JU WENJUN".
  4. [http://theweekinchess.com/html/twic529.html#11 "TWIC 529: Asian Women's Championship"]. ''[[The Week in Chess]]''. 2004-12-27.
  5. Ramirez, Alejandro. (2014-03-29). "Yu Yangyi & Ju Wenjun Chinese Champs". ChessBase.
  6. Liang, Ziming. (2011-07-26). "1st Hangzhou WGM Tournament – Ju Wenjun wins, Harika becomes GM". ChessBase.
  7. "Title Applications – 4th quarter Presidential Board Meeting, 7–10 November 2014, Sochi, RUS". FIDE.
  8. Niklesh Kumar Jain. (2014-09-14). "Sharjah Grand Prix winner Ju Wenjun". ChessBase.
  9. [http://www.fide.com/component/content/article/1-fide-news/8403-list-of-titles-approved-by-the-4th-quarter-pb-2014.html "List of titles approved by the 4th quarter PB 2014"] {{Webarchive. link. (2014-11-26 . FIDE.)
  10. (2014-05-15). "Lei Ting jie wins China Women Master". News About Chess.
  11. (2017-12-28). "Viswanathan Anand and Ju Wenjun are World Rapid Champions!".
  12. (28 December 2018). "FIDE World Rapid Champions: Dubov and Ju". ChessBase.
  13. (28 December 2017). "King Salman World Rapid Championship 2017 Women".
  14. (28 December 2018). "King Salman World Rapid Championship 2018 Women".
  15. (2024-01-19). "Tata Steel Chess R5: Ju upsets Firouzja, Roebers stuns Niemann".
  16. "Carlsen, Nepomniachtchi Agree To Share World Blitz Title, Ju Wins Women's". chess.com.
  17. "Magnus Carlsen defends Blitz title, shares it with Nepomniachtchi; Wenjun Champion in Women’s section". Sportstar.
  18. "Ju Wenjun is triumphant in Khanty-Mansiysk". FIDE.
  19. Schulz, André. (2016-12-05). "Ju Wenjun wins Grand Prix series". ChessBase.
  20. (24 November 2018). "Ju Wenjun Beats Lagno In Playoff, Wins Women's World Chess Championship". [[Chess.com]].
  21. "雅戈尔杯中国国际象棋甲级联赛官方网站".
Info: Wikipedia Source

This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.

Want to explore this topic further?

Ask Mako anything about Ju Wenjun — get instant answers, deeper analysis, and related topics.

Research with Mako

Free with your Surf account

Content sourced from Wikipedia, available under CC BY-SA 4.0.

This content may have been generated or modified by AI. CloudSurf Software LLC is not responsible for the accuracy, completeness, or reliability of AI-generated content. Always verify important information from primary sources.

Report