ATHLETE

Kaija Parve

1964 - Today

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Kaija Parve-Helinurm (born 14 June 1964, in Tallinn) is a former and so far most successful Estonian biathlete. She used to be a cross-country skier (became Estonian champion in 1983), but after hearing that there was a possibility to participate in World Championships, Parve switched to biathlon. After spending 7 years with Soviet biathlon team, she retired in 1990 due to pregnancy and getting married. Read more on Wikipedia

Her biography is available in 18 different languages on Wikipedia. Kaija Parve is the 2,787th most popular athlete (up from 2,945th in 2024), the 233rd most popular biography from Estonia (up from 244th in 2019) and the 20th most popular Estonian Athlete.

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Among ATHLETES

Among athletes, Kaija Parve ranks 2,787 out of 6,025Before her are Elisabeth Micheler-Jones, José Martínez, Nelson Évora, Robert Scheidt, Irina Kalinina, and Vebjørn Rodal. After her are Samuel Matete, Olena Zubrilova, Khalid Boulami, Hoàng Xuân Vinh, Ramona Balthasar, and Nesta Carter.

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Contemporaries

Among people born in 1964, Kaija Parve ranks 742Before her are Ilse Aigner, Josefa Idem, Nancy Brilli, Pablo Morales, Bruce LaBruce, and Sergio Canavero. After her are Jessica Fridrich, Ramona Balthasar, Zeki Demirkubuz, Gianandrea Noseda, Erica Gimpel, and Teresa Edwards.

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In Estonia

Among people born in Estonia, Kaija Parve ranks 233 out of 351Before her are Lenna Kuurmaa (1985), Oksana Yermakova (1973), Stig Rästa (1980), Elmo Nüganen (1962), Margus Tsahkna (1977), and Katrin Siska (1983). After her are Rein Taaramäe (1987), Mart Poom (1972), Piret Järvis (1984), Riho Terras (1967), Allar Levandi (1965), and Konstantin Vassiljev (1984).

Among ATHLETES In Estonia

Among athletes born in Estonia, Kaija Parve ranks 20Before her are Kalevi Kotkas (1913), Erki Nool (1970), Bruno Junk (1929), Gerd Kanter (1979), Aleksander Tammert (1973), and Oksana Yermakova (1973). After her are Jaak Mae (1972), Tõnu Tõniste (1967), Andrus Värnik (1977), Aleksei Budõlin (1976), Roland Lessing (1978), and Andrei Jämsä (1982).