CHESS PLAYER

Anna Ushenina

1985 - Today

Photo of Anna Ushenina

Icon of person Anna Ushenina

Anna Yuriyivna Ushenina (Ukrainian: Анна Юріївна Ушеніна; born 30 August 1985) is a Ukrainian chess grandmaster who was Women's World Chess Champion from November 2012 to September 2013. Read more on Wikipedia

Her biography is available in 40 different languages on Wikipedia (up from 38 in 2024). Anna Ushenina is the 226th most popular chess player (up from 307th in 2024), the 961st most popular biography from Ukraine (up from 1,181st in 2019) and the 19th most popular Ukrainian Chess Player.

Memorability Metrics

Loading...

Page views of Anna Ushenina by language

Loading...

Among CHESS PLAYERS

Among chess players, Anna Ushenina ranks 226 out of 461Before her are John Nunn, Aleksandar Matanović, Roberto Grau, Xie Jun, Viktor Kupreichik, and Tony Miles. After her are Pentala Harikrishna, Zhu Chen, Ding Liren, Julio Bolbochán, Yasser Seirawan, and Rustam Kasimdzhanov.

Most Popular Chess Players in Wikipedia

Go to all Rankings

Contemporaries

Among people born in 1985, Anna Ushenina ranks 183Before her are Laura Haddock, Kazuki Nakajima, Dritan Abazović, Danica Curcic, Kenji Takahashi, and Emile Hirsch. After her are Tatsuya Kawahara, Nathalie Kelley, Hakuhō Shō, Graziano Pellè, José Sosa, and Danny Vukovic.

Others Born in 1985

Go to all Rankings

In Ukraine

Among people born in Ukraine, Anna Ushenina ranks 959 out of 1,365Before her are Oksana Markarova (1976), Eduard Kozynkevych (1949), Mikhail Gurevich (1959), and Vera Stroyeva (1903). After her are Pavel Morozenko (1939), Volodymyr Vakulenko (1972), Ivan Yaremchuk (1962), Yaroslava Mahuchikh (2001), Victoria Amelina (1986), Serhiy Honchar (1970), Andriy Sadovyi (1968), and Epiphanius I of Ukraine (1979).

Among CHESS PLAYERS In Ukraine

Among chess players born in Ukraine, Anna Ushenina ranks 19Before her are Eduard Gufeld (1936), Nicolas Rossolimo (1910), Kira Zvorykina (1919), Oleg Romanishin (1952), Boris Verlinsky (1888), and Ruslan Ponomariov (1983). After her are Igors Rausis (1961), Pavel Eljanov (1983), Kateryna Lagno (1989), Alexander Chernin (1960), Gregory Kaidanov (1959), and Mariya Muzychuk (1992).