FENCER

András Szatmári

1993 - Today

Photo of András Szatmári

Icon of person András Szatmári

András Szatmári (born 3 February 1993) is a Hungarian right-handed sabre fencer, 2018 team European champion, 2017 individual world champion, and 2021 team Olympic bronze medalist. Read more on Wikipedia

His biography is available in 19 different languages on Wikipedia (up from 16 in 2024). András Szatmári is the 351st most popular fencer (up from 353rd in 2024), the 1,106th most popular biography from Hungary (down from 1,084th in 2019) and the 43rd most popular Hungarian Fencer.

Memorability Metrics

Loading...

Page views of András Szatmári by language

Loading...

Among FENCERS

Among fencers, András Szatmári ranks 351 out of 349Before him are Emma Samuelsson, Kazuyasu Minobe, Nicolas Limbach, Masaru Yamada, Ruslan Nasibulin, and Tiberiu Dolniceanu. After him are Max Heinzer, Anita Blaze, Adelina Zagidullina, Manon Brunet, Giulia Rizzi, and Irene Vecchi.

Most Popular Fencers in Wikipedia

Go to all Rankings

Contemporaries

Among people born in 1993, András Szatmári ranks 858Before him are Ivan Močinić, Meliha İsmailoğlu, Alexander Ipatov, Anastasia Voynova, Riki Harakawa, and Yasser Ibrahim. After him are Alexander Megos, Felipe Avenatti, Rick Zabel, Jonathan Rodríguez, Execution of Navid Afkari, and Aika Mitsui.

Others Born in 1993

Go to all Rankings

In Hungary

Among people born in Hungary, András Szatmári ranks 1,106 out of 1,077Before him are Attila Vári (1976), Peter Bence (1991), Botond Balogh (2002), Fanny Stollár (1998), Anna Donáth (1987), and Attila Balázs (1988). After him are Bálint Kopasz (1997), Péter Jakab (1980), Dániel Varga (1983), Katalin Pálinger (1978), Anita Gara (1983), and Rudolf Dombi (1986).

Among FENCERS In Hungary

Among fencers born in Hungary, András Szatmári ranks 43Before him are Tamás Decsi (1982), Emese Szász-Kovács (1982), Zsolt Nemcsik (1977), András Rédli (1983), Gergely Siklósi (1997), and Csanád Gémesi (1986). After him are Péter Somfai (1980), Anna Márton (1995), Máté Tamás Koch (1999), Tibor Andrásfi (1999), Eszter Muhari (2002), and Dávid Nagy (1999).