POLITICIAN

Ilgar Mammadov

1965 - Today

Photo of Ilgar Mammadov

Icon of person Ilgar Mammadov

Ilgar Yasharovich Mammadov (also spelled Mamedov, Russian: Ильгар Яшарович Мамедов, Azerbaijani: İlqar Yaşar oğlu Məmmədov; born 15 November 1965 in Baku, Azerbaijan SSR) is a Soviet and Russian of Azerbaijani origin who serves as President of the Russian Fencing Federation, and a former fencer . He is a two-time Olympic and one time world champion in team foil. Read more on Wikipedia

His biography is available in different languages on Wikipedia. Ilgar Mammadov is the 19,072nd most popular politician (down from 18,828th in 2019), the 205th most popular biography from Azerbaijan (down from 197th in 2019) and the 38th most popular Azerbaijani Politician.

Memorability Metrics

Loading...

Page views of Ilgar Mammadov by language

Loading...

Among POLITICIANS

Among politicians, Ilgar Mammadov ranks 19,072 out of 19,576Before him are Tomasz Makowski, Hadia Tajik, Roger Torrent, Csanád Szegedi, Lindiwe Sisulu, and Margarete Schramböck. After him are Andrew McCollum, Kelly Ayotte, Per Bolund, Brian Schatz, Amanda Lind, and Kyrsten Sinema.

Most Popular Politicians in Wikipedia

Go to all Rankings

Contemporaries

Among people born in 1965, Ilgar Mammadov ranks 902Before him are Igor Khoroshev, Atul Gawande, Nigel Bond, Will Perdue, Peter MacKay, and Steve Bull. After him are Aditya Pancholi, Courtney Gains, Julie Warner, Hans-Peter Pohl, Erik Hämäläinen, and Camille Coduri.

Others Born in 1965

Go to all Rankings

In Azerbaijan

Among people born in Azerbaijan, Ilgar Mammadov ranks 205 out of 232Before him are Maksim Medvedev (1989), Emin Ahmadov (1986), Nadir Rustamli (1999), Radik Isayev (1989), Vagif Javadov (1989), and Zafar Guliev (1972). After him are Vugar Alakbarov (1981), Ashot Nadanian (1972), Fuad Aslanov (1976), Jalal Mirzayev (1977), David Ayrapetyan (1983), and Rasul Chunayev (1991).

Among POLITICIANS In Azerbaijan

Among politicians born in Azerbaijan, Ilgar Mammadov ranks 38Before him are Elmar Mammadyarov (1960), Ramil Safarov (1977), Andrey Lugovoy (1966), Georgy Poltavchenko (1953), Ganira Pashayeva (1975), and Jeyhun Bayramov (1973). After him are Parviz Nasibov (1998), and Farida Azizova (1995).