FENCER

Violetta Kolobova

1991 - Today

Photo of Violetta Kolobova

Icon of person Violetta Kolobova

Violetta Vitalyevna Kolobova (Russian: Виолетта Витальевна Колобова; born 27 July 1991) is a Russian right-handed épée fencer, 2012 team European champion, two-time individual European champion, two-time team world champion, two-time Olympian, and 2016 team Olympic bronze medalist. Read more on Wikipedia

Her biography is available in different languages on Wikipedia. Violetta Kolobova is the 375th most popular fencer (down from 354th in 2019), the 3,822nd most popular biography from Russia (down from 3,758th in 2019) and the 39th most popular Russian Fencer.

Memorability Metrics

Loading...

Page views of Violetta Kolobova by language

Loading...

Among FENCERS

Among fencers, Violetta Kolobova ranks 375 out of 349Before her are Carlos Llavador, Giorgio Avola, Anna Márton, Bianca Pascu, Máté Tamás Koch, and Tibor Andrásfi. After her are Tommaso Marini, Kirill Borodachev, Courtney Hurley, Eszter Muhari, Max Hartung, and Anton Borodachev.

Most Popular Fencers in Wikipedia

Go to all Rankings

Contemporaries

Among people born in 1991, Violetta Kolobova ranks 1,523Before her are Tony Oller, Asahi Yada, Yekaterina Ilyina, Renaud Jay, Charle Cournoyer, and Lukian Araújo de Almeida. After her are Amir Ghafour, Takahiro Tanio, Naoto Ando, Rafaelle Souza, Yuki Nogami, and Viktoria Schnaderbeck.

Others Born in 1991

Go to all Rankings

In Russia

Among people born in Russia, Violetta Kolobova ranks 3,822 out of 3,761Before her are Polina Gorshkova (1989), Daria Spiridonova (1998), Dmitry Strakhov (1995), Alexander Panzhinskiy (1989), Roman Anoshkin (1987), and Yekaterina Ilyina (1991). After her are Eduard Popp (null), Aleksandr Prudnikov (1989), Yulia Karimova (1994), Sergey Ridzik (1992), Kirill Borodachev (2000), and Vasilii Egorov (1992).

Among FENCERS In Russia

Among fencers born in Russia, Violetta Kolobova ranks 39Before her are Adelina Zagidullina (1993), Aleksey Cheremisinov (1985), Nikita Glazkov (1992), Sergey Bida (1993), Sofia Pozdniakova (1997), and Marta Martyanova (1998). After her are Kirill Borodachev (2000), Anton Borodachev (2000), Olga Nikitina (1998), Vladislav Mylnikov (2000), Kamil Ibragimov (1993), and Dmitry Zherebchenko (1989).