POLITICIAN

Arsen Fadzaev

1962 - Today

Photo of Arsen Fadzaev

Icon of person Arsen Fadzaev

Arsen Suleymanovich Fadzaev (Russian: Арсен Сулейманович Фадзаев; born 5 September 1962, in Chikola, North Ossetia–Alania, Russian SFSR, Soviet Union) is a former Soviet wrestler, World champion and Olympic champion in freestyle wrestling. He also ran as a candidate for SRZP in the 2022 North Ossetia–Alania parliamentary election. Read more on Wikipedia

His biography is available in 19 different languages on Wikipedia (up from 17 in 2024). Arsen Fadzaev is the 18,076th most popular politician (down from 17,025th in 2024), the 2,705th most popular biography from Russia (down from 2,492nd in 2019) and the 491st most popular Russian Politician.

Memorability Metrics

Loading...

Page views of Arsen Fadzaev by language

Loading...

Among POLITICIANS

Among politicians, Arsen Fadzaev ranks 18,077 out of 19,576Before him are Wolfgang Tiefensee, Angelino Alfano, Marina Logvinenko, Hevrin Khalaf, Roberta Pinotti, Peter Müller, and Michael Hardie Boys. After him are Julien Nkoghe Bekale, Rabri Devi, Claude Joseph, Serhiy Arbuzov, and Emile Roemer.

Most Popular Politicians in Wikipedia

Go to all Rankings

Contemporaries

Among people born in 1962, Arsen Fadzaev ranks 700Before him are Hubert Strolz, Steffi Martin, Gilbert Bodart, Abel Antón, Michele Mitchell, and John Ngugi. After him are Julien Nkoghe Bekale, Al Sapienza, Tintín Márquez, Nicholas Turturro, Emile Roemer, and Hannes Holm.

Others Born in 1962

Go to all Rankings

In Russia

Among people born in Russia, Arsen Fadzaev ranks 2,705 out of 3,761Before him are Vadim Repin (1971), Rawil Gaynetdin (1959), Eva Rivas (1987), Marina Logvinenko (1961), Valeriy Borchin (1986), and Sultan Ibragimov (1975). After him are Yuliya Snigir (1983), Sergey Sirotkin (1995), Maryna Bazanova (1962), Olga Chernyavskaya (1963), Alexander Melentyev (1954), and Zlata Ognevich (1986).

Among POLITICIANS In Russia

Among politicians born in Russia, Arsen Fadzaev ranks 491Before him are Zilya Valeeva (1952), Alexander Gusev (1947), Marina Kosheveya (1960), Dmitry Petrov (1958), Yevgeny Zinichev (1966), and Marina Logvinenko (1961). After him are Maryna Bazanova (1962), Aysen Nikolayev (1972), Alexander Borodai (1972), Yelena Serova (1976), Igor Trandenkov (1966), and Alexei Nemov (1976).