FENCER

Aida Mohamed

1976 - Today

Photo of Aida Mohamed

Icon of person Aida Mohamed

Aida Mohamed (born 12 March 1976) is a Hungarian foil fencer, silver medallist at the 1993 World Championships and team gold medallist at the 2007 European Championships. She is the only Hungarian athlete in history to have competed at seven different Olympic Games (from 1996 to 2020). Read more on Wikipedia

Her biography is available in 17 different languages on Wikipedia. Aida Mohamed is the 200th most popular fencer (down from 199th in 2024), the 951st most popular biography from Hungary (up from 969th in 2019) and the 34th most popular Hungarian Fencer.

Memorability Metrics

Loading...

Page views of Aida Mohamed by language

Loading...

Among FENCERS

Among fencers, Aida Mohamed ranks 200 out of 349Before her are Oh Ha-na, Jung Jin-sun, Anja Fichtel, Ulrich Robeiri, Kim Ji-yeon, and Iván Trevejo. After her are Britta Heidemann, Peter Joppich, Andrea Cipressa, Áron Szilágyi, Sabine Bau, and Salvatore Sanzo.

Most Popular Fencers in Wikipedia

Go to all Rankings

Contemporaries

Among people born in 1976, Aida Mohamed ranks 831Before her are Tiko, Shigenori Hagimura, Lee Ingleby, Sala Baker, Bair Badënov, and Daniel Mesotitsch. After her are Chun Lee-kyung, Antón Paz, Leandro Machado, Soleil Moon Frye, Marquinhos, and Pablo Lastras.

Others Born in 1976

Go to all Rankings

In Hungary

Among people born in Hungary, Aida Mohamed ranks 948 out of 1,077Before her are Barnabás Varga (1994), Róbert Fazekas (1975), and Krisztina Tóth (1967). After her are John Komlos (1944), Ádám Pintér (1988), Diána Igaly (1965), Ádám Nagy (1995), Róbert Isaszegi (1965), Áron Szilágyi (1990), Ádám Bogdán (1987), Krisztián Németh (1989), and János Martinek (1965).

Among FENCERS In Hungary

Among fencers born in Hungary, Aida Mohamed ranks 34Before her are Imre Bujdosó (1959), Pál Szekeres (1964), Péter Abay (1962), Bence Szabó (1962), Géza Imre (1974), and Iván Kovács (1970). After her are Áron Szilágyi (1990), Gábor Boczkó (1977), Tamás Decsi (1982), Emese Szász-Kovács (1982), Zsolt Nemcsik (1977), and András Rédli (1983).