CYCLIST

Christian Henn

1964 - Today

Photo of Christian Henn

Icon of person Christian Henn

Christian Henn (born 11 March 1964) is a German former road racing cyclist, who won the bronze medal for West Germany in the men's individual road race at the 1988 Summer Olympics in Seoul, South Korea. He also won the German National Road Race Championships in 1996. He was a professional rider from 1989 to 1999. After he retired after testing positive for testosterone, he admitted to doping. Read more on Wikipedia

His biography is available in 17 different languages on Wikipedia (up from 15 in 2024). Christian Henn is the 627th most popular cyclist (up from 734th in 2024), the 6,252nd most popular biography from Germany (up from 6,350th in 2019) and the 48th most popular German Cyclist.

Memorability Metrics

Loading...

Page views of Christian Henn by language

Loading...

Among CYCLISTS

Among cyclists, Christian Henn ranks 627 out of 1,613Before him are Michael Mørkøv, Lotte Kopecky, Bert Grabsch, Johan Vansummeren, Karin Thürig, and José Azevedo. After him are Ondřej Sosenka, Emma Johansson, Óscar Sevilla, Daniele Nardello, Andrej Hauptman, and Borut Božič.

Most Popular Cyclists in Wikipedia

Go to all Rankings

Contemporaries

Among people born in 1964, Christian Henn ranks 858Before him are Daniele Scarpa, Robson Green, Butch Reynolds, Nelli Cooman, Roberto Cravero, and Jesús Solana. After him are Aleksandar Šoštar, Svilen Rusinov, Tom Nijssen, Shannon Whirry, Mark Steven Johnson, and Annick Girardin.

Others Born in 1964

Go to all Rankings

In Germany

Among people born in Germany, Christian Henn ranks 6,255 out of 7,253Before him are Annegret Strauch (1968), Rani Khedira (1994), Karsten Brannasch (1966), Kathleen Nord (1965), Anna Kovalchuk (1977), and Jens Keller (1970). After him are Ken Duken (1979), Ingo Spelly (1966), Nicole Uphoff (1967), Ramona Portwich (1967), Andreas Reinke (1969), and Roland Schimmelpfennig (1967).

Among CYCLISTS In Germany

Among cyclists born in Germany, Christian Henn ranks 48Before him are Rolf Aldag (1968), Roland Günther (1962), Hanka Kupfernagel (1974), Uwe Peschel (1968), Uwe Messerschmidt (1962), and Bert Grabsch (1975). After him are Stefan Schumacher (1981), Roland Hennig (1967), John Degenkolb (1989), Bernd Gröne (1963), Guido Fulst (1970), and Robert Bartko (1975).