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A few questions about my grandfather's chess games

So, I recently found databases on the Internet of my grandfather's game, and his FIDE profile.

- At his highest point he had a rating of 2175 (ELO), so what would be his approximate rating with the glicko-2 system? (I know one can't really compare both systems, but I just want to have an idea)

- I also found out that he played in some tournaments, is there a website where I can found what happened in all of those tournaments?

Here's the list of his games if you need more information : http://chesstempo.com/gamedb/player/9246
If you want to know your "real" FIDE rating, you need to play against FIDE rated players. There's nothing else to say on the matter.

And the question about ELO vs. Glicko has been asked numerous times and the response is always that there is no sensible way to map an ELO rating to a Glicko rating, even if you're assuming the players are from within the same pool.

Tbh, 90% of questions regarding ratings don't understand what ratings represent in the first place. Here's a nice lengthy piece that I wrote on the subject: http://en.lichess.org/qa/6/how-does-the-rating-system-work-on-here
A FIDE rating peak of 2205 in 1993 means that your grandfather is a very strong chess player. The best players in the world in that time were around 2700 - 2750. I am surprised if he does not have a title; most people with a FIDE rating of 2200 would have at least a Candidate Master or National Master title.
Your grandfather has played great games, I especially like http://chesstempo.com/gamedb/game/194852

You should take a look at the following links:
http://chess-db.com/public/play/chess.jsp?c=white&id=604267
http://gameknot.com/comment.pl?t=2&k=124956
http://www.yacpdb.org/?id=688&rev=1587450
http://chesscomposers.blogspot.nl/2012/09/september-16th.html
http://gameknot.com/comment.pl?t=2&k=124957
http://www.365chess.com/players/Georges_Antonoff
http://www.chessgames.com/perl/chessgame?gid=1078493
http://chess-db.com/public/pinfo.jsp?id=604267 (you can click on the tournaments)
Search on Google: "antonoff" "ratings.fide.com/tournament_report.phtml"
You really found a lot of content about him‚ thanks a lot !
Wait a minute ... your grandfather was playing in western Europe during a period in time during which the Cold War ended and Germany was unified and your concern is his playing strength?! Dude! This is the stuff of which documentaries and non-fiction books are made!

All you need is to shift the focus from "how strong was he" to "what was it like to be playing the chess circuit at that time and in those places." Try to contact some of his younger, but retired opponents and (as long as they're not fruitcakes like Bobby Fischer was) get them to tell their stories. Chances are pretty good they'll be happy to relive their glory years, especially for a young guy trying to understand his grandfather, with the backdrop of the decline of communism. I'd be surprised if you didn't encounter some kind of interesting tale which will capture the attention of the less chess inclined, plus the whole family history investigation is the sort of thing which networks like the BBC (and whatever France's equivalent is) eat up as "human interest" stories at the very least.

You have some considerable work ahead of you, but you'll love it (Hell, you might even stumble into a career).

I don't really understand what is so special in playing chess during the Cold War and after‚ could you explain a bit more?

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