FENCER

Anna Sivkova

1982 - Today

Photo of Anna Sivkova

Icon of person Anna Sivkova

Anna Vitalyevna Sivkova (Russian: Анна Витальевна Сивкова; born 12 April 1982) is a Russian épée fencer, 2004 Olympic team champion., three-time World team champion (2001, 2003, and 2013) and European team champion in 2012. Read more on Wikipedia

Her biography is available in different languages on Wikipedia. Anna Sivkova is the 225th most popular fencer (down from 223rd in 2019), the 3,198th most popular biography from Russia (up from 3,281st in 2019) and the 20th most popular Russian Fencer.

Memorability Metrics

Loading...

Page views of Anna Sivkova by language

Loading...

Among FENCERS

Among fencers, Anna Sivkova ranks 225 out of 349Before her are Diego Occhiuzzi, Brice Guyart, Aida Shanayeva, Arianna Errigo, Lei Sheng, and Timur Safin. After her are Inès Boubakri, Florin Zalomir, Erwann Le Péchoux, Oh Eun-seok, Yannick Borel, and Paolo Pizzo.

Most Popular Fencers in Wikipedia

Go to all Rankings

Contemporaries

Among people born in 1982, Anna Sivkova ranks 868Before her are Andriy Stadnik, Aleksejs Saramotins, Seung-hwan Oh, Phai Phongsathon, Natallia Mikhnevich, and Laura Chiatti. After her are Inga Abitova, Tadesse Abraham, William Bonnet, Nicola Spirig, Yssouf Koné, and Khasan Baroyev.

Others Born in 1982

Go to all Rankings

In Russia

Among people born in Russia, Anna Sivkova ranks 3,198 out of 3,761Before her are Aida Shanayeva (1986), Magomed Aripgadjiev (1977), Ruslan Provodnikov (1984), Nikita Katsalapov (1991), Natallia Mikhnevich (1982), and Boris Mironov (1972). After her are Inga Abitova (1982), Alexander Legkov (1983), Alexander Misurkin (1977), Musa Evloev (1993), Nazyr Mankiev (1985), and Alexei Morozov (1977).

Among FENCERS In Russia

Among fencers born in Russia, Anna Sivkova ranks 20Before her are Svetlana Boyko (1972), Stanislav Pozdnyakov (1973), Sergey Sharikov (1974), Aleksey Frosin (1978), Aleksandr Shirshov (1972), and Aida Shanayeva (1986). After her are Aleksey Yakimenko (1983), Igor Tikhomirov (1963), Renal Ganeyev (1985), Yuliya Gavrilova (1989), Veniamin Reshetnikov (1986), and Inna Deriglazova (1990).