CHESS PLAYER

Elena Sedina

1968 - Today

Photo of Elena Sedina

Icon of person Elena Sedina

Elena Sedina (Russian: Елена Седина; Ukrainian: Оле́на Се́діна, Olena Sedina; born 1 June 1968 in Kyiv) is a Ukrainian-Italian chess player who holds the FIDE titles of International Master (IM) and Woman Grandmaster (WGM). She has won the Ukrainian Women's Chess Championship, the Australian Open Chess Championship, and is a Chess Olympiad and Mitropa Cup gold medalist. Read more on Wikipedia

Her biography is available in 16 different languages on Wikipedia. Elena Sedina is the 290th most popular chess player (down from 281st in 2024), the 1,102nd most popular biography from Ukraine (up from 1,122nd in 2019) and the 26th most popular Ukrainian Chess Player.

Memorability Metrics

Loading...

Page views of Elena Sedina by language

Loading...

Among CHESS PLAYERS

Among chess players, Elena Sedina ranks 290 out of 461Before her are Vugar Gashimov, Artashes Minasian, Gregory Kaidanov, Alexander Graf, Evgeny Agrest, and Mariya Muzychuk. After her are Salomėja Zaksaitė, Yoshiharu Habu, Eduardas Rozentalis, Ju Wenjun, Maxime Vachier-Lagrave, and Ognjen Cvitan.

Most Popular Chess Players in Wikipedia

Go to all Rankings

Contemporaries

Among people born in 1968, Elena Sedina ranks 667Before her are Robert C. Cooper, Mauricio Serna, Tatyana Shikolenko, Jens Weidmann, Ingrid Klimke, and Ken Marino. After her are Jérôme Ferrari, Mike Piazza, Tammy Duckworth, Bui Simon, Hikmat Mirzayev, and Jon Drummond.

Others Born in 1968

Go to all Rankings

In Ukraine

Among people born in Ukraine, Elena Sedina ranks 1,102 out of 1,365Before her are Ilya Tsymbalar (1969), Oleg Tsaryov (1970), Justine Pasek (1979), Mariya Muzychuk (1992), Tayanna (1984), and Valentyna Shevchenko (1975). After her are Vadym Tyshchenko (1963), Evgeni Platov (1967), Olha Saladukha (1983), Aleksandr Kirichenko (1967), Aleksandr Tuchkin (1964), and Ze'ev Elkin (1971).

Among CHESS PLAYERS In Ukraine

Among chess players born in Ukraine, Elena Sedina ranks 26Before her are Igors Rausis (1961), Pavel Eljanov (1983), Kateryna Lagno (1989), Alexander Chernin (1960), Gregory Kaidanov (1959), and Mariya Muzychuk (1992). After her are Anna Zatonskih (1978), Boris Alterman (1970), Andrei Volokitin (1986), Alexander Areshchenko (1986), Zahar Efimenko (1985), and Inna Gaponenko (1976).