WRITER

Mikhail Gurevich

1959 - Today

Photo of Mikhail Gurevich

Icon of person Mikhail Gurevich

Mikhail Gurevich (Russian: Михаил Наумович Гуревич, romanized: Mikhail Naumovich Gurevich; born 22 February 1959) is a Soviet-born Belgian chess player. He was a top ten ranked player from 1989 to 1991. Gurevich became an International Grandmaster in 1986, and is currently an FIDE arbiter and senior trainer. Read more on Wikipedia

His biography is available in different languages on Wikipedia. Mikhail Gurevich is the 6,178th most popular writer (up from 6,212th in 2019), the 952nd most popular biography from Ukraine (up from 966th in 2019) and the 130th most popular Ukrainian Writer.

Memorability Metrics

Loading...

Page views of Mikhail Gurevich by language

Loading...

Among WRITERS

Among writers, Mikhail Gurevich ranks 6,178 out of 7,302Before him are Philippe Delerm, Larry Kramer, Dejan Ajdačić, Hannah More, John Jakes, and Stanisław Barańczak. After him are Dorothy Wordsworth, Daniel Pearl, Gyula Juhász, Tillie Olsen, Caterina Davinio, and Jun Maeda.

Most Popular Writers in Wikipedia

Go to all Rankings

Contemporaries

Among people born in 1959, Mikhail Gurevich ranks 461Before him are Ellen Kuras, Cherie Currie, Urs Zimmermann, Kathy Hilton, Steve Strange, and Dejan Ajdačić. After him are Nikos Dendias, Marc Alexandre, Rafael Amador, Jon Oliva, Hiroshi Ohashi, and Everton Nogueira.

Others Born in 1959

Go to all Rankings

In Ukraine

Among people born in Ukraine, Mikhail Gurevich ranks 952 out of 1,365Before him are Natasha Korolyova (1973), Svyatoslav Vakarchuk (1975), Oleksandra Matviichuk (1983), Boris Shukhov (1947), Oksana Markarova (1976), and Eduard Kozynkevych (1949). After him are Vera Stroyeva (1903), Anna Ushenina (1985), Pavel Morozenko (1939), Volodymyr Vakulenko (1972), Ivan Yaremchuk (1962), and Yaroslava Mahuchikh (2001).

Among WRITERS In Ukraine

Among writers born in Ukraine, Mikhail Gurevich ranks 130Before him are Serhiy Zhadan (1974), Jan Parandowski (1895), Kazimierz Wierzyński (1894), Eugenie Schwarzwald (1872), Dmitry Gordon (1967), and Mikhail Svetlov (1903). After him are Volodymyr Vakulenko (1972), Victoria Amelina (1986), Emmanuil Kazakevich (1913), Georgi Vladimov (1931), Oles Buzina (1969), and Ihor Pavlyuk (1967).