Alexander Dmitrievich Petrov (; February 12, 1794 – April 22, 1867) was a Russian chess player, chess composer, and chess writer.
Petrov was born in Biserovo (now part of Opochka in Pskov Oblast) into a noble family and is usually remembered as the first great Russian chess master. From 1804, he lived in St. Petersburg. In 1809, he defeated Baranov, while in 1814 he defeated Kopev, likely St. Petersburg's two leading chess players, and became the best Russian player at the age of 15. For over half a century, Petrov was considered Russia's strongest player.
He is an author of the first chess handbook in Russian (Shakhmatnaya igra [...], St Petersburg, 1824). He also analysed with Carl Jaenisch the opening that later became known as the Petrov's Defense or Russian Game (ECO C42).
From 1840, he lived in Warsaw (then in the Russian Empire), where he successfully played against top Warsaw chess masters: Alexander Hoffman, Piotrowski, Szymaà Âski, Siewieluà Âski, Hieronim Czarnowski, Szymon Winawer, and others.
Petrov won matches against D. A. Baranov (4âÂÂ2) in 1809, Carl Jaenisch (2âÂÂ1) at St. Petersburg in 1844; Prince Sergey Semenovich Urusov (3âÂÂ1) at St. Petersburg in 1853 and (13ýâÂÂ7ý) at Warsaw in 1859; and Ilya Shumov (4âÂÂ2) at St. Petersburg in 1862.
During the January Uprising (1863âÂÂ1864), he left Warsaw for Vienna and Paris. Among others, he played a match with Paul Journoud at Paris in 1863.
He was an original chess thinker, not afraid to disagree with the ideas of Philidor, the dominant chess figure of his time. Petrov's most well-known problem is "The Retreat of Napoleon I from Moscow" (St. Petersburg, 1824).
Petrov died in Warsaw in 1867, and was buried in the Orthodox Cemetery in Warsaw.