FENCER

Anna Márton

1995 - Today

Photo of Anna Márton

Icon of person Anna Márton

Anna Márton (born 31 March 1995) is a Hungarian sabre fencer. She is a World Championships gold and bronze medalist, three-time European Championships medalist and three-time Olympian. Márton represented Hungary at the 2016 Summer Olympics, the 2020 Summer Olympics and the 2024 Summer Olympics. At junior level, she became world and European champion in 2014. Read more on Wikipedia

Her biography is available in different languages on Wikipedia. Anna Márton is the 371st most popular fencer (down from 351st in 2019), the 1,104th most popular biography from Hungary (down from 1,086th in 2019) and the 42nd most popular Hungarian Fencer.

Memorability Metrics

Loading...

Page views of Anna Márton by language

Loading...

Among FENCERS

Among fencers, Anna Márton ranks 371 out of 349Before her are Miles Chamley-Watson, Martyna Swatowska-Wenglarczyk, Misaki Emura, Mohamed El-Sayed, Carlos Llavador, and Giorgio Avola. After her are Bianca Pascu, Máté Tamás Koch, Tibor Andrásfi, Violetta Kolobova, Tommaso Marini, and Kirill Borodachev.

Most Popular Fencers in Wikipedia

Go to all Rankings

Contemporaries

Among people born in 1995, Anna Márton ranks 1,032Before her are Wellington Daniel Bueno, Mats Møller Dæhli, Dario Del Fabro, Bruno Viana, Caroline Sunshine, and Julien Baker. After her are Jun Woong-tae, Lucas Pellas, Li Junhui, Erick Cabaco, Rikuto Hirose, and Malin Reitan.

Others Born in 1995

Go to all Rankings

In Hungary

Among people born in Hungary, Anna Márton ranks 1,104 out of 1,077Before her are Balázs Hárai (1987), Emma White (null), Tamás Kenderesi (1996), Bence Bánhidi (1995), János Hahn (1995), and Rita Keszthelyi (1991). After her are Dávid Sigér (1990), Péter Sidi (1978), Máté Tamás Koch (1999), Tibor Andrásfi (1999), Ajna Késely (2001), and Zita Szucsánszki (1987).

Among FENCERS In Hungary

Among fencers born in Hungary, Anna Márton ranks 42Before her are Emese Szász-Kovács (1982), Zsolt Nemcsik (1977), András Rédli (1983), Gergely Siklósi (1997), Csanád Gémesi (1986), and András Szatmári (1993). After her are Máté Tamás Koch (1999), Tibor Andrásfi (1999), Eszter Muhari (2002), Liza Pusztai (2001), Renáta Katona (1994), and Flóra Pásztor (1998).