POLITICIAN

Arina Averina

1998 - Today

Photo of Arina Averina

Icon of person Arina Averina

Arina Alekseyevna Averina (Russian: Арина Алексеевна Аверина; born 13 August 1998) is a Russian former individual rhythmic gymnast. She was a 2020 Summer Olympics finalist, a two-time (2017, 2019) world all-around silver medalist, a two-time European all-around champion (2018, 2021) and the 2016 Grand Prix Final all-around bronze medalist. She was a three-time (2019–2021) Russian national all-around champion and a three-time (2015, 2017, 2022) Russian national all-around medalist. Her identical twin sister Dina Averina is also a competitive rhythmic gymnast. Read more on Wikipedia

Her biography is available in 14 different languages on Wikipedia (down from 15 in 2024). Arina Averina is the 19,986th most popular politician (down from 19,184th in 2024), the 3,909th most popular biography from Russia (down from 3,482nd in 2019) and the 567th most popular Russian Politician.

Memorability Metrics

Loading...

Page views of Arina Averina by language

Loading...

Contemporaries

Among people born in 1998, Arina Averina ranks 532Before her are Mohamed Katir, Caroline Dolehide, Johannes Erm, Kristoffer Ajer, Eveline Saalberg, and Alessandro Covi. After her are Keigo Tsunemoto, Kara Hayward, Chuma Okeke, Robin Hack, Sofia Richie, and Ella Hunt.

Others Born in 1998

Go to all Rankings

In Russia

Among people born in Russia, Arina Averina ranks 3,909 out of 3,761Before her are Yevgeny Korotyshkin (1983), Gary Shteyngart (1972), Maksim Kanunnikov (1991), Alexander Vasyunov (1988), Stanislav Donets (1983), and Natalya Voronina (1994). After her are Maria Paseka (1995), Andrei Mostovoy (1997), Anastasiia Galashina (1997), Sharif Mukhammad (1990), Aiaal Lazarev (1986), and Natalia Vorobieva (1991).

Among POLITICIANS In Russia

Among politicians born in Russia, Arina Averina ranks 565Before her are Anton Golotsutskov (1985), Tatiana Grigorieva (1975), Mikhail Grigorenko (1994), and Turpal Bisultanov (2001). After her are Zaur Kuramagomedov (1988), Yelena Produnova (1980), Gashim Magomedov (1999), Jana Khokhlova (1985), Murat Khrachev (1983), Vitali Koval (1980), Sergey Emelin (1995), and Tatiana Shchegoleva (1982).