Played By: Walter Koenig
Final Rank: Commander
Full Name: Pavel Andreievich Chekov
Serial number: 656-5827B
Year of birth: 2245
Education: Starfleet Academy, 2263-67
Marital status: Single
Starfleet Career Summary
2263 -- As ensign, took first posting on U.S.S. Enterprise under Capt. James
T. Kirk as navigator
2269 -- Promoted to lieutenant, named security chief to Capt. Will Decker on
refit of Enterprise
2277 -- Assigned to U.S.S. Reliant under Capt. Clark Terrell 2285 -- As
commander and Reliant First Officer, witnessed Genesis incident and captain's
death
2286 -- Charged and cleared of theft of Enterprise a year earlier with fellow
officers
Chekov was the navigator on the original U.S.S. Enterprise under the
command of James T. Kirk. An only child, his youthful career was so full of
brash pronouncements of Russian ethnic pride and accomplishments he
became a good-natured joke among his superiors.
Although he was always a promising officer with a career to bear it out, the
young Chekov was prone to hot-heated actions and romantic attachments.
While attending Starfleet Academy his involvement with fellow cadet Irina
Galliulin broke off when she dropped out of the service before graduation in
disdain for its structure. Years later they met again when she and other
Eden-seekers with Dr. Sevrin were aboard.
Following the end of his first five-year mission, Chekov was promoted to
lieutenant when he was assigned as security chief aboard the refit U.S.S.
Enterprise. Assigned to the U.S.S. Reliant in 2377 and promoted to
commander within eight years of that, he was first officer to the ill-fated Captain
Clark Terrell during the Genesis Project incident and Khan Singh's grab for it.
For the next few years he remained one of Kirk's trusted officers and stood
with the group in the theft of the Enterprise to refuse Spock's body and katra,
and then faced the UFP Council when those charges were dropped.
Chekov suffered serious wounds when time-traveling to 1986 during an
attempted escape from the U.S.S. Enterprise naval aircraft carrier when
suspected of being a Soviet spy of the time. He would have died if left to
contemporary medicine, but was saved thanks to McCoy and went on to help
secure the Khitomer Peace Accords - followed shortly by his shocked witness
to Kirk's apparent death at the christening of the newest U.S.S. Enterprise,
1701-B.