GYMNAST

Ioannis Mitropoulos

1874 - 2000

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Ioannis Mitropoulos (Greek: Ιωάννης Μητρόπουλος; 1874 – after 1896) was a Greek gymnast. He competed at the 1896 Summer Olympics in Athens. Mitropoulos competed in both the individual and team events of the parallel bars, and the individual rings event. In the rings event, he gave Greece its first gold medal in gymnastics. Read more on Wikipedia

His biography is available in different languages on Wikipedia. Ioannis Mitropoulos is the 24th most popular gymnast, the 587th most popular biography from Greece and the most popular Greek Gymnast.

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Among GYMNASTS

Among gymnasts, Ioannis Mitropoulos ranks 24 out of 370Before him are Takashi Ono, Mitsuo Tsukahara, Alfred Schwarzmann, Akinori Nakayama, Viktor Chukarin, and Yukio Endo. After him are Conrad Böcker, Alina Kabaeva, Miroslav Cerar, Gustave Sandras, Shuji Tsurumi, and Carl Albert Andersen.

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Contemporaries

Among people born in 1874, Ioannis Mitropoulos ranks 121Before him are Fernand Bouisson, Charles W. Gilmore, Julio Romero de Torres, Leopoldo Lugones, Nicola Canali, and Fred Niblo. After him are Mary Ann Bevan, Alexander Khatisian, Manuel Díaz, Francis Lane, Juan Bautista Sacasa, and Nasrullah Khan. Among people deceased in 2000, Ioannis Mitropoulos ranks 148Before him are Basil Bernstein, Jean-Claude Izzo, Nicholas Clay, Julie London, John Tukey, and Hendrik C. van de Hulst. After him are Frédéric Dard, George Segal, John Ljunggren, Mohammad Ali Fardin, Gisèle Freund, and Stephanos Christopoulos.

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In Greece

Among people born in Greece, Ioannis Mitropoulos ranks 587 out of 1,024Before him are Konstantinos Demertzis (1876), Rhianus (-275), Aris Velouchiotis (1905), Polydorus of Sparta (-741), Diocles of Carystus (-400), and Athanasius III of Constantinople (1597). After him are Damophon (null), Petros Protopapadakis (1854), Princess Elizabeth of Greece and Denmark (1904), Alberto Savinio (1891), Antonios Kriezis (1796), and Solomon Alkabetz (1505).

Among GYMNASTS In Greece

Among gymnasts born in Greece, Ioannis Mitropoulos ranks 1After him are Petros Persakis (1879), Thomas Xenakis (1875), Dimosthenis Tampakos (1976), and Eleftherios Petrounias (1990).