Castling is one turn/move .
Yes, when castling one must touch the king first. If one touches the rook first, it is not castling - only the rook can be moved during that turn.
No. Castling counts as a move.
Castling is also known as enroking. In chess notation, king-side castling is denoted as "O-O" while queen-side castling is denoted as "O-O-O".
o-o means castling on king's side & o-o-o means castling on queen's side. THat is NOT with the Queen , but the King and the Queen's Castle.
There are two ways to notate a castle in chess. If you are castling to the nearest rook, then you notate that by doing "0-0." If you are castling queen side, then you notate that by writing "0-0-0." A good trick to remember this is by how far your piece is traveling.
According to one source, castling was introduced about 1555 a.d.
Once! Every piece gets to move only once per turn, and only one piece can move every turn, except in castling where the king and the rook move.
O-O
Castling involves the rook and the king. The moving of any piece involves a manoeuvre
he can turn into bats
Castling involves both rook and King moving to their respective squares whether it be a King-side castle or queen-side castle . When castling , the king moves two squares towards the rook , and the rook moves over the king to the next square , i.e. , black's king on e8 and rook on a8 move to : king c8, rook d8 (Long Castling) , white's king on e1 and rook on h1 move to : king g1, rook f1 (Short castling) ~ look to the related link below for additional information regarding castling .
Castling is an optional chess move that involves one of a player's rooks and his king. In this move, the king is moved two squares toward the rook he intends to castle with, and the rook is placed on the square the king moved over to assume its final position. There are some restrictions, and they should be reviewed. Situations in which castling is not allowed: 1. If the king or the rook being used in castling has moved. 2. If the king is in check, would have castled through check, or would castle into check. 3. If there are any other pieces between them. Castling, the only legal move where two pieces move simultaneously, is notated as 0-0 if you are castling king side (the rook is only 3 spaces away) or as 0-0-0 if you are castling queen side (the rook is 4 spaces away).