ATHLETE

Juliette Ramel

1987 - Today

Photo of Juliette Ramel

Icon of person Juliette Ramel

Juliette Ramel (born 12 April 1987) is a Swedish Olympic dressage rider. Representing Sweden, she competed at the 2016 Summer Olympics in Rio de Janeiro where she finished 28th in the individual and 5th in the team competition. At the European Championships in Rotterdam 2019 she won team bronze together with her older sister Antonia Ramel. Read more on Wikipedia

Her biography is available in different languages on Wikipedia. Juliette Ramel is the 8,849th most popular athlete (down from 8,120th in 2019), the 1,943rd most popular biography from Sweden (down from 1,925th in 2019) and the 216th most popular Swedish Athlete.

Memorability Metrics

Loading...

Page views of Juliette Ramel by language

Loading...

Among ATHLETES

Among athletes, Juliette Ramel ranks 8,849 out of 6,025Before her are Brigitte Ntiamoah, Cravon Gillespie, Yana Noskova, Rira Suzuki, Benedikt Fürk, and Sam Bosworth. After her are Patrick Dogue, Miklós Cirjenics, Alana Smith, Sarah Fischer, Jenna Caira, and Julia Hauser.

Most Popular Athletes in Wikipedia

Go to all Rankings

Contemporaries

Among people born in 1987, Juliette Ramel ranks 1,828Before her are Julia Sude, Brian Harman, Martina Strähl, Carly Telford, Tim Federowicz, and Mariia Cherepanova. After her are Nazar Kovalenko, Mandy Bujold, Veronika Macarol, Damien Schumann, Rusila Nagasau, and Lee Hup Wei.

Others Born in 1987

Go to all Rankings

In Sweden

Among people born in Sweden, Juliette Ramel ranks 1,943 out of 1,879Before her are Oskar Sunnefeldt (1998), Jesper Stålheim (1988), Therese Nilshagen (1983), Jonna Adlerteg (1995), Jessica Ryde (1994), and Robin Pacek (1991). After her are Maja Nilsson (1999), Alena Nazdrova (1998), Isabelle Andersson (2000), Sanzhar Mussayev (1996), Victor Johansson (1998), and Jean Paul Bredau (1999).

Among ATHLETES In Sweden

Among athletes born in Sweden, Juliette Ramel ranks 216Before her are Nikita Glasnović (1995), Agnes Alexiusson (1996), Oskar Sunnefeldt (1998), Jesper Stålheim (1988), Therese Nilshagen (1983), and Robin Pacek (1991). After her are Maja Nilsson (1999), Alena Nazdrova (1998), Sanzhar Mussayev (1996), Jean Paul Bredau (1999), Emil Blomberg (1992), and Madelene Sagström (1992).