POLITICIAN

Lado Gurgenidze

1970 - Today

Photo of Lado Gurgenidze

Icon of person Lado Gurgenidze

Vladimer "Lado" Gurgenidze (Georgian: ვლადიმერ [ლადო] გურგენიძე; born 7 December 1970) is a Georgian career banker, business executive, and former politician, who was the sixth Prime Minister of Georgia, from 22 November 2007 to 1 November 2008. Read more on Wikipedia

His biography is available in different languages on Wikipedia. Lado Gurgenidze is the 17,928th most popular politician (up from 18,352nd in 2019), the 284th most popular biography from Georgia (up from 299th in 2019) and the 99th most popular Georgian Politician.

Memorability Metrics

Loading...

Page views of Lado Gurgenidze by language

Loading...

Among POLITICIANS

Among politicians, Lado Gurgenidze ranks 17,928 out of 19,576Before him are Alexander Ramsey, Dagur B. Eggertsson, José Manuel Albares, Nandini Satpathy, Norman Thomas, and Ray LaHood. After him are Caroline van der Plas, Joseph Albert Sullivan, Mike Johanns, Adam Delimkhanov, Andrei Arlovski, and Steingrímur J. Sigfússon.

Most Popular Politicians in Wikipedia

Go to all Rankings

Contemporaries

Among people born in 1970, Lado Gurgenidze ranks 504Before him are Jay Mohr, Tomoko Kawakami, Natasha Gregson Wagner, David Barrufet, Kate Allen, and Alessandra Negrini. After him are Magnus Larsson, Daniel Handler, Bo Hamburger, Pilar Castro, Tetsuya Harada, and Hans Vonk.

Others Born in 1970

Go to all Rankings

In Georgia

Among people born in Georgia, Lado Gurgenidze ranks 284 out of 406Before him are Nodar Kumaritashvili (1988), Zaza Gogava (1971), Lisa Batiashvili (1979), Davit Bakradze (1972), Leila Meskhi (1968), and Georgi Kinkladze (1973). After him are Guram Kashia (1987), Tamta (1981), Eka Tkeshelashvili (1977), Khatia Dekanoidze (1977), Tina Kandelaki (1975), and Nino Katamadze (1972).

Among POLITICIANS In Georgia

Among politicians born in Georgia, Lado Gurgenidze ranks 99Before him are Leri Khabelov (1964), Nika Gilauri (1975), Nika Melia (1979), Grigol Mgaloblishvili (1973), Giorgi Ugulava (1975), and Davit Bakradze (1972). After him are Eka Tkeshelashvili (1977), Khatia Dekanoidze (1977), Davit Kezerashvili (1978), Giorgi Baramidze (1968), Tamar Beruchashvili (1961), and Irakli Alasania (1973).