CHESS PLAYER

Irina Levitina

1954 - Today

Photo of Irina Levitina

Icon of person Irina Levitina

Irina Solomonovna Levitina (born June 8, 1954) is a former Soviet and current American chess and bridge player. In chess, she has been a World Championship Candidate in 1984 and gained the title Woman Grandmaster. In contract bridge she has won six world championship events, four women and two mixed, including play on two world-champion USA women teams. Read more on Wikipedia

Her biography is available in different languages on Wikipedia. Irina Levitina is the 203rd most popular chess player (up from 205th in 2019), the 2,219th most popular biography from Russia (up from 2,388th in 2019) and the 29th most popular Russian Chess Player.

Memorability Metrics

Loading...

Page views of Irina Levitina by language

Loading...

Among CHESS PLAYERS

Among chess players, Irina Levitina ranks 203 out of 461Before her are Max Weiss, Leonid Shamkovich, Carl Mayet, Jonathan Penrose, Fenny Heemskerk, and Gyula Sax. After her are Isaac Kashdan, Juan Corzo, Arnold Denker, Alexei Shirov, Nana Ioseliani, and Herman Steiner.

Most Popular Chess Players in Wikipedia

Go to all Rankings

Contemporaries

Among people born in 1954, Irina Levitina ranks 467Before her are Gabriel Costa, Marta Lucía Ramírez, Hubert Minnis, Zoran Simović, Alfonso Zamora, and Dominique Bathenay. After her are Andrzej Sekuła, Lou Pearlman, Yuji Horii, José Diego, Silvio Micali, and Gerónimo Barbadillo.

Others Born in 1954

Go to all Rankings

In Russia

Among people born in Russia, Irina Levitina ranks 2,219 out of 3,761Before her are Nikolai Budarin (1953), Yuli Raizman (1903), Anatoliy Serdyukov (1962), Olavi Paavolainen (1903), Aleksei Paramonov (1925), and Vladimir Astapovsky (1946). After her are Boris Razinsky (1933), Andrei Panin (1962), Ivan Fomin (1872), Aleksandr Adabashyan (1945), Vasily Solovyov-Sedoi (1907), and Vladislav Krapivin (1938).

Among CHESS PLAYERS In Russia

Among chess players born in Russia, Irina Levitina ranks 29Before her are Artur Yusupov (1960), Gennadi Sosonko (1943), Ratmir Kholmov (1925), Vitaly Tseshkovsky (1944), Ian Nepomniachtchi (1990), and Leonid Shamkovich (1923). After her are Alexandra Kosteniuk (1984), Anatoly Lein (1931), Larissa Volpert (1926), Yuri Balashov (1949), Alexander Morozevich (1977), and Elena Donaldson-Akhmilovskaya (1957).