ATHLETE

Gyöngyi Szalay-Horváth

1968 - 2017

Photo of Gyöngyi Szalay-Horváth

Icon of person Gyöngyi Szalay-Horváth

Gyöngyi Szalay-Horváth (24 March 1968 – 30 December 2017) was a Hungarian fencer. She won a bronze medal in the women's individual épée event at the 1996 Summer Olympics. Read more on Wikipedia

Her biography is available in 18 different languages on Wikipedia (up from 17 in 2024). Gyöngyi Szalay-Horváth is the 3,681st most popular athlete (down from 3,629th in 2024), the 938th most popular biography from Hungary (down from 936th in 2019) and the 117th most popular Hungarian Athlete.

Memorability Metrics

Loading...

Page views of Gyöngyi Szalay-Horváth by language

Loading...

Contemporaries

Among people born in 1968, Gyöngyi Szalay-Horváth ranks 861Before her are Franck Dumas, Michihiro Tsuruta, Chen Jing, Jimmy Shea, Alex Ferns, and Karyn Kusama. After her are Oksana Grishina, Uwe Tellkamp, Elisa Uga, Sevdalin Marinov, Jimmy Jean-Louis, and David Usupashvili. Among people deceased in 2017, Gyöngyi Szalay-Horváth ranks 677Before her are Serge Baguet, Angel Espinosa, Fadwa Souleimane, Fredy Schmidtke, Aaron Hernandez, and Derek Ibbotson. After her are Joost van der Westhuizen, Moïse Brou Apanga, Tom Alter, David Poisson, Yukinori Miyabe, and Gillian Rolton.

Others Born in 1968

Go to all Rankings

Others Deceased in 2017

Go to all Rankings

In Hungary

Among people born in Hungary, Gyöngyi Szalay-Horváth ranks 941 out of 1,077Before her are Márton Gyöngyösi (1977), Krisztina Morvai (1963), Hanna Tetteh (1967), Zoltán Stieber (1988), Ferenc Csipes (1965), Niki Belucci (1983), Júlia Sebestyén (1981), Ildikó Mádl (1969), and László Nagy (1981). After her are Anita Görbicz (1983), Enikő Győri (1968), and Zoltán Kővágó (1979).

Among ATHLETES In Hungary

Among athletes born in Hungary, Gyöngyi Szalay-Horváth ranks 117Before her are Tímea Nagy (1970), Éva Dónusz (1967), József Csák (1966), László Fidel (1965), Susan Francia (1982), and Krisztián Pars (1982). After her are Zoltán Kővágó (1979), László Fábián (1963), Róbert Fazekas (1975), Diána Igaly (1965), János Martinek (1965), and Tibor Gécsek (1964).