People Around The World Who Have Lived Past 100!!

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Kam­ato Hongo, a Japan­ese super­cente­nar­ian, who was appar­ently the old­est liv­ing per­son from March 2002 until her death in 2003. She lived in Kagoshima and cel­e­brated her 116th birth­day a month before her death from pneumonia.

Hongo was born on the small island of Tokunoshima, she later moved to Kagoshima where she lived with her daugh­ter. She became a minor celebrity and was a focus of some mer­chan­dise includ­ing wash-cloths, key-rings, phone cards and more (imag­ine how styl­ish a shirt with a wrin­kled great grand­mother on it would look). Hongo was 58 years old when World War II ended.

Kyushu, where Kagoshima is located is home to sev­eral other age record hold­ers, mak­ing it an island of longevity, much like Okinawa.

Car­rie C. White

Carrie-C-%20White

Car­rie C. White was rec­og­nized by Guin­ness world records as the old­est per­son in the world at around the time of her 114th birth­day in 1988. Car­rie was a res­i­dent of Palatka, Florida nurs­ing home. She was in a nurs­ing home not because of age, but due to a ner­vous break­down in 1909, which left her insti­tu­tion­al­ized. Car­rie is another case of dis­pute, how­ever her doc­u­men­ta­tion seems to be in order enough to give her the title of world’s old­est per­son between Jan­u­ary 11th 1988 and Feb­ru­ary 14th 1991.

Eliz­a­beth Bolden

601211 Bolden Obit Hmed4P.Hmedium

Eliz­a­beth is a case that is not dis­puted, with doc­u­ments in per­fect order. And yes, she is another one from the United States. In fact, the US has more super­cente­nar­i­ans than any coun­try in the world. They are not con­sid­ered a land of longevity though due to the num­ber per capita.

Eliz­a­beth Bolden was one of only seven peo­ple world­wide that lived until age 116. Her birth was the last remain­ing doc­u­mented birth of 1890. Eliz­a­beth Jones (later Bolden) was born in Somerville Ten­nessee, the daugh­ter of freed slaves. Lizzie mar­ried Lewis Bolden circa 1908 and their first child, a son named Ezell, was born on Sep­tem­ber 21st 1909. She had seven chil­dren in total, only two of whom were still alive at the time of her death in 2006.

In addi­tion to Lizzie’s seven chil­dren she had 40 grand-children, 75 great grand-children, 150 great-great grand-children, 220 great-great-great grand-children and 75 great-great-great-great grand-children. Geez, imag­ine Christ­mas at granny’s house.

Dur­ing my research I couldn’t find any doc­u­men­ta­tion on her lifestyle habits. How­ever a few lower down on this list reveal some of their secrets.

Tane Ikai

Unknown Person-1

Tane Ikain is Japan’s old­est female on record ever. She is also the old­est undis­puted per­son since the Koseki sys­tem in 1879.

Tane Ikai out­lived her daugh­ter and her three sons. Ikai moved to a retire­ment home in 1972 at age 93 where she enjoyed sewing and pot­tery until she had a stroke at age 99. She also suf­fered a stroke at age 113 and was bed-ridden ever since. She sur­vived on three meals of rice gruel a day (mmm yummy, I promise there are bet­ter super­cente­nar­ian diets lower on this list). She died at age 116 and 175 days of kid­ney failure.

Her body was the first of a super­cente­nar­ian known to be autopsied.

Maria Esther Here­dia de Capovilla

Capo32

Maria was a super­cente­nar­ian born in Ecuador and, until the time of her death, was rec­og­nized as the world’s old­est liv­ing per­son. She was the old­est doc­u­mented per­son to have lived in three centuries.

Maria was the daugh­ter of a colonel and lived a life in the upper-class elite. She attended social func­tions and art classes. She never smoked or drank hard liquor, unlike oth­ers on this list. At age 100 Capovilla nearly died and was given last rites, but has been rea­son­ably free of health prob­lems since then until her death. At age 116 she was said to be in good health and was able to watch TV, read news­pa­pers and walk with­out the aid of a cane.

By March 2006 Capovilla’s health had declined some­what and she was no longer able to read the news­pa­per. She had also stopped talk­ing and was only able to walk with the help of two peo­ple. Still she was able to sit upright in a chair and was said to be doing fine. She died of Pneu­mo­nia just 18 days before her 117th birthday.

Meilml08

Meilleur was a French-Canadian super­cente­nar­ian, who upon the death of Jeanne Cal­ment (num­ber one on the list), was the old­est liv­ing per­son. She is still the old­est ever Canadian.

By the time she died of a blood clot at age 117, her son was already in the same nurs­ing home and her old­est liv­ing daugh­ter was 90 years old. Now that would make you feel old, a 90 year old daugh­ter. She was said to be a veg­e­tar­ian and an “Avid Cig­a­rette Smoker” (as opposed to a nor­mal cig­a­rette smoker?).

Lucy Han­nah

Unknown Person-2

Lucy Han­nah was an Amer­i­can super cen­te­nar­ian, that’s right another Amer­i­can. But I can’t help it, she’s fourth on the list due to age. Han­nah is the old­est African Amer­i­can to have ever lived and the old­est Amer­i­can at the time of her death. She is also, strangely, the old­est per­son to have never held the title of old­est LIVING per­son because she coin­cided with Jeanne Calment.

Sarah Knauss

Sknaussb-1

Sarah Knauss, was the old­est per­son to have ever lived in Amer­ica. She died 33 hours before the year 2000. Sarah Knauss lived her entire life in Penn­syl­va­nia. She was born in a small coal-mining town called Hol­ly­wood. That’s right folks, Hol­ly­wood, the other Hollywood.

Knauss was a home­maker and insur­ance office man­ager. Her daugh­ter, who was 96 at the time of her death and lived to be 101 her­self, said she was a very tran­quil and peace­ful per­son. She said noth­ing fazed her mother. “This is why she has lived so long“. In 1995 she was asked if she enjoyed her long life. Her answer was that she enjoyed it because she had her health and could still do many things into old age. Her inter­ests were needle­point, watch­ing tele­vised golf and eat­ing choco­late tur­tles, cashews and potato chips. Knauss was an ele­gant lady, very refined.

Sarah died qui­etly in her room at the Phoebe-Devitt Home Foun­da­tion Facil­ity on Decem­ber 30th 1999. Doc­tors said she was in good health with no signs of ill­ness. She just sim­ply ‘expired’. Had she lived three days longer she would have lived in three dif­fer­ent centuries.

Shigechiyo Izumi

1189526493 1189456296 Izumi

Izumi is another dis­puted case like the first cou­ple of list items. How­ever Guin­ness World Record still main­tains that his record is valid. Izumi is unique on a list of super­cente­nar­i­ans because he is male. There is a pat­tern of longevity that seems to favor women. This may be due to a lot of rea­sons. One the­ory is that males live harsher, more stress­ful lives. Well they did in the first part of this cen­tury and before.

Izumi was a Japan­ese born super­cente­nar­ian. His name was recorded in Japan’s first cen­sus in 1871. He also holds the world record for the longest work­ing life. He worked a total of 98 years. His wife died at age 90, which is still a pretty good run. He drank brown sugar shochu, an alco­holic bev­er­age dis­tilled from bar­ley or rice. Inter­est­ingly he took up smok­ing at age 70. Lord knows why. Hang­ing with the cool kids maybe? He started work­ing in 1872, when he was six years old (this is what he says any­way) and con­tin­ued work­ing until 1970 at age 105. He says his long life is the work of the gods, Bud­dha and the sun. he lived through a total of 71 Japan­ese prime ministers.

Izumi died of pneu­mo­nia after being in hos­pi­tal a short time on Feb­ru­ary 21st 1986, the same day as Jeanne Calment’s 111th birth­day (see item one). There is some research to sug­gest that Izumi was not the old­est per­son at the time and put his age at a juve­nile 105 years. How­ever this is still up for debate. If this is true Chris­t­ian Mortensen is the old­est man to have ever lived at 115 years, 252 days. Christian’s age has been ver­i­fied and is undisputed.

Jeanne Cal­ment

Calment500 13521S

Jeanne Cal­ment is my favorite. Super longevity is a fas­ci­nat­ing topic for me. Con­sid­er­ing that the max­i­mum human lifes­pan pos­si­ble is con­sid­ered to be 123 – 125 years of age, makes Jeanne very spe­cial indeed. She def­i­nitely over­stayed her time here on Earth.

Jeanne Louise Cal­ment was a French super­cente­nar­ian from Arles. She out­lived her daugh­ter and her grand­son. She was very well known at age 113 on the cen­te­nary of Vin­cent Van Gogh’s visit to Arles. She was the last per­son liv­ing to have per­son­ally met the artist. Her lifes­pan has been thor­oughly doc­u­mented, with more proof of her age than for any other case.

Funny Fact: Cal­ment had no liv­ing heirs in 1965 at age 90. She made a deal to sell her apart­ment to lawyer Andrea-Francois Raf­fray on a con­tin­gency con­tract. This is often referred to as a reverse mort­gage. He agreed to pay her 2500 francs every month until her death. Sounds like a smart move on his part con­sid­er­ing she was 90 years old. He ended up pay­ing her what equates to $180,000, which is more than dou­ble the apartment’s worth. After Raffray’s death in 1995 from can­cer at age 77, his wife con­tin­ued the pay­ments until Calment’s death. How silly would you feel mak­ing that deal then hav­ing her live over 32 years after age 90?

Cal­ment met Vin­cent Van Gogh in 1888 when he came to her father’s shop to buy some paint and pen­cils. She described him as dirty, badly dressed and dis­agree­able. She remem­bers this visit clearly along with watch­ing the Eif­fel tower being built.

At age 85 Jeanne took up fenc­ing and at age 100 she was still rid­ing a bicy­cle. She claimed to never have been ath­letic or fanat­i­cal about health and fit­ness. Cal­ment lived alone until just before her 110th birth­day. It was decided that she would be bet­ter off in a nurs­ing home after a cook­ing acci­dent nearly killed her. Jeanne was in great health and was able to walk right up until age 114 and 11 months when she frac­tured her femur from a fall. after an oper­a­tion on the bro­ken limb she required a wheel­chair. She became ill with the flu just before her 116th birth­day. She smoked right up until she was 117. Cal­ment ascribed her longevity and youth­ful looks to olive oil. She rubbed it on her skin, drank it and used it in cook­ing. She enjoyed port wine and ate almost one kilo­gram (2.2lbs) of choco­late per week. Here is another photo of Jeanne aged 22.

Shi­rali Muslimov

Screen Shot 2010-02-07 At 1.44.42 Pm

Shi­rali Mus­limov is an inter­est­ing case. Some say his age is for real, most dis­pute his extreme longevity. Mus­limov was a Talysh shep­herd from the vil­lage of Barzavu in the Lerik region of Azer­bai­jan, a moun­tain­ous area near the Iran­ian border.

The only evi­dence of Muslimov’s age is a pass­port that states his birth date in 1805. So there could be some truth to it. What is more likely how­ever is that he has been con­fused with some­one else, pos­si­bly his father or grand­fa­ther. It would be nice to believe though. Imag­ine a healthy 168 years of life. In the photo above on the right, Mus­limov was allegedly over 160 years old.

R2978653232

Kam­ato Hongo, a Japan­ese super­cente­nar­ian, who was appar­ently the old­est liv­ing per­son from March 2002 until her death in 2003. She lived in Kagoshima and cel­e­brated her 116th birth­day a month before her death from pneumonia.

Hongo was born on the small island of Tokunoshima, she later moved to Kagoshima where she lived with her daugh­ter. She became a minor celebrity and was a focus of some mer­chan­dise includ­ing wash-cloths, key-rings, phone cards and more (imag­ine how styl­ish a shirt with a wrin­kled great grand­mother on it would look). Hongo was 58 years old when World War II ended.

Kyushu, where Kagoshima is located is home to sev­eral other age record hold­ers, mak­ing it an island of longevity, much like Okinawa.

Car­rie C. White

Carrie-C-%20White

Car­rie C. White was rec­og­nized by Guin­ness world records as the old­est per­son in the world at around the time of her 114th birth­day in 1988. Car­rie was a res­i­dent of Palatka, Florida nurs­ing home. She was in a nurs­ing home not because of age, but due to a ner­vous break­down in 1909, which left her insti­tu­tion­al­ized. Car­rie is another case of dis­pute, how­ever her doc­u­men­ta­tion seems to be in order enough to give her the title of world’s old­est per­son between Jan­u­ary 11th 1988 and Feb­ru­ary 14th 1991.

Eliz­a­beth Bolden

601211 Bolden Obit Hmed4P.Hmedium

Eliz­a­beth is a case that is not dis­puted, with doc­u­ments in per­fect order. And yes, she is another one from the United States. In fact, the US has more super­cente­nar­i­ans than any coun­try in the world. They are not con­sid­ered a land of longevity though due to the num­ber per capita.

Eliz­a­beth Bolden was one of only seven peo­ple world­wide that lived until age 116. Her birth was the last remain­ing doc­u­mented birth of 1890. Eliz­a­beth Jones (later Bolden) was born in Somerville Ten­nessee, the daugh­ter of freed slaves. Lizzie mar­ried Lewis Bolden circa 1908 and their first child, a son named Ezell, was born on Sep­tem­ber 21st 1909. She had seven chil­dren in total, only two of whom were still alive at the time of her death in 2006.

In addi­tion to Lizzie’s seven chil­dren she had 40 grand-children, 75 great grand-children, 150 great-great grand-children, 220 great-great-great grand-children and 75 great-great-great-great grand-children. Geez, imag­ine Christ­mas at granny’s house.

Dur­ing my research I couldn’t find any doc­u­men­ta­tion on her lifestyle habits. How­ever a few lower down on this list reveal some of their secrets.

Tane Ikai

Unknown Person-1

Tane Ikain is Japan’s old­est female on record ever. She is also the old­est undis­puted per­son since the Koseki sys­tem in 1879.

Tane Ikai out­lived her daugh­ter and her three sons. Ikai moved to a retire­ment home in 1972 at age 93 where she enjoyed sewing and pot­tery until she had a stroke at age 99. She also suf­fered a stroke at age 113 and was bed-ridden ever since. She sur­vived on three meals of rice gruel a day (mmm yummy, I promise there are bet­ter super­cente­nar­ian diets lower on this list). She died at age 116 and 175 days of kid­ney failure.

Her body was the first of a super­cente­nar­ian known to be autopsied.

Maria Esther Here­dia de Capovilla

Capo32

Maria was a super­cente­nar­ian born in Ecuador and, until the time of her death, was rec­og­nized as the world’s old­est liv­ing per­son. She was the old­est doc­u­mented per­son to have lived in three centuries.

Maria was the daugh­ter of a colonel and lived a life in the upper-class elite. She attended social func­tions and art classes. She never smoked or drank hard liquor, unlike oth­ers on this list. At age 100 Capovilla nearly died and was given last rites, but has been rea­son­ably free of health prob­lems since then until her death. At age 116 she was said to be in good health and was able to watch TV, read news­pa­pers and walk with­out the aid of a cane.

By March 2006 Capovilla’s health had declined some­what and she was no longer able to read the news­pa­per. She had also stopped talk­ing and was only able to walk with the help of two peo­ple. Still she was able to sit upright in a chair and was said to be doing fine. She died of Pneu­mo­nia just 18 days before her 117th birthday.

Meilml08

Meilleur was a French-Canadian super­cente­nar­ian, who upon the death of Jeanne Cal­ment (num­ber one on the list), was the old­est liv­ing per­son. She is still the old­est ever Canadian.

By the time she died of a blood clot at age 117, her son was already in the same nurs­ing home and her old­est liv­ing daugh­ter was 90 years old. Now that would make you feel old, a 90 year old daugh­ter. She was said to be a veg­e­tar­ian and an “Avid Cig­a­rette Smoker” (as opposed to a nor­mal cig­a­rette smoker?).

Lucy Han­nah

Unknown Person-2

Lucy Han­nah was an Amer­i­can super cen­te­nar­ian, that’s right another Amer­i­can. But I can’t help it, she’s fourth on the list due to age. Han­nah is the old­est African Amer­i­can to have ever lived and the old­est Amer­i­can at the time of her death. She is also, strangely, the old­est per­son to have never held the title of old­est LIVING per­son because she coin­cided with Jeanne Calment.

Sarah Knauss

Sknaussb-1

Sarah Knauss, was the old­est per­son to have ever lived in Amer­ica. She died 33 hours before the year 2000. Sarah Knauss lived her entire life in Penn­syl­va­nia. She was born in a small coal-mining town called Hol­ly­wood. That’s right folks, Hol­ly­wood, the other Hollywood.

Knauss was a home­maker and insur­ance office man­ager. Her daugh­ter, who was 96 at the time of her death and lived to be 101 her­self, said she was a very tran­quil and peace­ful per­son. She said noth­ing fazed her mother. “This is why she has lived so long“. In 1995 she was asked if she enjoyed her long life. Her answer was that she enjoyed it because she had her health and could still do many things into old age. Her inter­ests were needle­point, watch­ing tele­vised golf and eat­ing choco­late tur­tles, cashews and potato chips. Knauss was an ele­gant lady, very refined.

Sarah died qui­etly in her room at the Phoebe-Devitt Home Foun­da­tion Facil­ity on Decem­ber 30th 1999. Doc­tors said she was in good health with no signs of ill­ness. She just sim­ply ‘expired’. Had she lived three days longer she would have lived in three dif­fer­ent centuries.

Shigechiyo Izumi

1189526493 1189456296 Izumi

Izumi is another dis­puted case like the first cou­ple of list items. How­ever Guin­ness World Record still main­tains that his record is valid. Izumi is unique on a list of super­cente­nar­i­ans because he is male. There is a pat­tern of longevity that seems to favor women. This may be due to a lot of rea­sons. One the­ory is that males live harsher, more stress­ful lives. Well they did in the first part of this cen­tury and before.

Izumi was a Japan­ese born super­cente­nar­ian. His name was recorded in Japan’s first cen­sus in 1871. He also holds the world record for the longest work­ing life. He worked a total of 98 years. His wife died at age 90, which is still a pretty good run. He drank brown sugar shochu, an alco­holic bev­er­age dis­tilled from bar­ley or rice. Inter­est­ingly he took up smok­ing at age 70. Lord knows why. Hang­ing with the cool kids maybe? He started work­ing in 1872, when he was six years old (this is what he says any­way) and con­tin­ued work­ing until 1970 at age 105. He says his long life is the work of the gods, Bud­dha and the sun. he lived through a total of 71 Japan­ese prime ministers.

Izumi died of pneu­mo­nia after being in hos­pi­tal a short time on Feb­ru­ary 21st 1986, the same day as Jeanne Calment’s 111th birth­day (see item one). There is some research to sug­gest that Izumi was not the old­est per­son at the time and put his age at a juve­nile 105 years. How­ever this is still up for debate. If this is true Chris­t­ian Mortensen is the old­est man to have ever lived at 115 years, 252 days. Christian’s age has been ver­i­fied and is undisputed.

Jeanne Cal­ment

Calment500 13521S

Jeanne Cal­ment is my favorite. Super longevity is a fas­ci­nat­ing topic for me. Con­sid­er­ing that the max­i­mum human lifes­pan pos­si­ble is con­sid­ered to be 123 – 125 years of age, makes Jeanne very spe­cial indeed. She def­i­nitely over­stayed her time here on Earth.

Jeanne Louise Cal­ment was a French super­cente­nar­ian from Arles. She out­lived her daugh­ter and her grand­son. She was very well known at age 113 on the cen­te­nary of Vin­cent Van Gogh’s visit to Arles. She was the last per­son liv­ing to have per­son­ally met the artist. Her lifes­pan has been thor­oughly doc­u­mented, with more proof of her age than for any other case.

Funny Fact: Cal­ment had no liv­ing heirs in 1965 at age 90. She made a deal to sell her apart­ment to lawyer Andrea-Francois Raf­fray on a con­tin­gency con­tract. This is often referred to as a reverse mort­gage. He agreed to pay her 2500 francs every month until her death. Sounds like a smart move on his part con­sid­er­ing she was 90 years old. He ended up pay­ing her what equates to $180,000, which is more than dou­ble the apartment’s worth. After Raffray’s death in 1995 from can­cer at age 77, his wife con­tin­ued the pay­ments until Calment’s death. How silly would you feel mak­ing that deal then hav­ing her live over 32 years after age 90?

Cal­ment met Vin­cent Van Gogh in 1888 when he came to her father’s shop to buy some paint and pen­cils. She described him as dirty, badly dressed and dis­agree­able. She remem­bers this visit clearly along with watch­ing the Eif­fel tower being built.

At age 85 Jeanne took up fenc­ing and at age 100 she was still rid­ing a bicy­cle. She claimed to never have been ath­letic or fanat­i­cal about health and fit­ness. Cal­ment lived alone until just before her 110th birth­day. It was decided that she would be bet­ter off in a nurs­ing home after a cook­ing acci­dent nearly killed her. Jeanne was in great health and was able to walk right up until age 114 and 11 months when she frac­tured her femur from a fall. after an oper­a­tion on the bro­ken limb she required a wheel­chair. She became ill with the flu just before her 116th birth­day. She smoked right up until she was 117. Cal­ment ascribed her longevity and youth­ful looks to olive oil. She rubbed it on her skin, drank it and used it in cook­ing. She enjoyed port wine and ate almost one kilo­gram (2.2lbs) of choco­late per week. Here is another photo of Jeanne aged 22.

Shi­rali Muslimov

Screen Shot 2010-02-07 At 1.44.42 Pm

Shi­rali Mus­limov is an inter­est­ing case. Some say his age is for real, most dis­pute his extreme longevity. Mus­limov was a Talysh shep­herd from the vil­lage of Barzavu in the Lerik region of Azer­bai­jan, a moun­tain­ous area near the Iran­ian border.

The only evi­dence of Muslimov’s age is a pass­port that states his birth date in 1805. So there could be some truth to it. What is more likely how­ever is that he has been con­fused with some­one else, pos­si­bly his father or grand­fa­ther. It would be nice to believe though. Imag­ine a healthy 168 years of life. In the photo above on the right, Mus­limov was allegedly over 160 years old.

http://www.lyfeproblems.com/people-around-world-lived-past-100/

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