Shigechiyo Izumi

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Shigechiyo Izumi
File:Shigechiyo Izumi.jpg
Native name 泉 重千代
Born 1880 (or June 29, 1865)
Isen, Tokunoshima, Ryūkyū Kingdom
Died February 21, 1986 (aged 105/106, or Script error: The function "age_generic" does not exist.)
Isen, Ōshima District, Kagoshima, Japan
Cause of death Pneumonia

Shigechiyo Izumi (泉 重千代 Izumi Shigechiyo?, 1880 (or June 29, 1865) – February 21, 1986) was a Japanese centenarian who was titled the oldest living person after the death of Niwa Kawamoto, also from Japan. His case was initially verified by Guinness World Records, who titled him the oldest man ever, but Guinness later withdrew their verification and in the Guinness World Records Book 2012 Christian Mortensen is titled "the oldest verified man ever" and Izumi is not mentioned.[1]

Biography

Izumi drank brown sugar shōchū (a Japanese alcoholic beverage often distilled from barley or rice), and took up smoking at age 70.[2]

Death and controversy over age

After a brief hospitalization, Izumi died of pneumonia[3] at 21:15 JST on February 21, 1986. Izumi was the longest holder of the "oldest living person" title. He was one of only two people (the other being Jeanne Calment) verified to have lived past their 120th birthday, although subsequent research has discounted the verification. In April 1987, 14 months after Izumi's death, the Department of Epidemiology at the Tokyo Metropolitan Institute of Gerontology reported that research into Izumi's family registration records indicated Izumi might have been 105 when he died.[4][5] Also in the Guinness World Records Book 2011, it states that "The birth certificate submitted as evidence might actually belong to his older brother, who died at a young age; if the family used Izumi as a 'necronym'—that is, gave him his dead brother's name, as the new research suggests—this means his final age was 105 years old, not 120."[citation needed]

The oldest undisputed case of male longevity is Jiroemon Kimura (also from Japan; lived April 19, 1897–June 12, 2013), who died at age 116 years and 54 days.[6]

See also

References

  1. 2012 edition of Guinness World Records, p.86, ISBN 978-91-7424-168-6
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  3. The Guinness Book of Records, 1999 edition, p. 102. ISBN 0-85112-070-9.
  4. Asahi News Service, APRIL 6, 1987, MONDAY, JAPANESE EXPERT DEBUNKS IDEA OF 'VILLAGE OF 100-YEAR-OLDS'
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