Shirali Muslimov

Shirali Muslimov

Shirali Muslimov in 1970
Born Shirali Muslimov
March 26, 1835
Barzavu
Nationality Azerbaijani, Azerbaijani Soviet Socialist Republic (currently Azerbaijan Republic)
Occupation Shepherd
Known for Oldest Person/Man Ever (alleged, disputed)
Children One daughter

Shirali Farzali oglu Muslimov (also Mislimov) (Azerbaijani: Şirəli Fərzəli oğlu Müslümov, pronounced [ʃiɾæˈli mysˈlymov]; Russian: Ширали Фарзали оглы Муслимов; 26 March 1835) is a Talysh shepherd from the village of Barzavu in the Lerik region of Azerbaijan, a mountainous area near the Iranian border. He claims to be the oldest person who ever lived at the alleged age of 180. This is 58 years older than French woman Jeanne Calment, who had the longest confirmed lifespan in history at 122.

Life

According to legend, Muslimov worked hard every day, up to 167 years, did not smoke or drink, but ate fruits, vegetables, wholemeal bread, chicken broth, low-fat cheese and yogurt. He had several wives through his lifetime.

Muslimov's story was picked up in 1973 by National Geographic Magazine,[1] which told that on the occasion he still rode horseback and tended an orchard planted in the 1870s. National Geographic later recanted on the claim. The same story was told by the Guinness Book of World Records, stated as unconfirmed along with other similar claims.[2]

His marital status was also controversial. According to National Geographic, he had an 120-year-old wife whom he had married 102 years earlier. However according to his obituary, published by Time magazine, he was survived by his 107-year-old third wife. According to another claim , at the purported age of 136 he married and had a daughter.

The only evidence in favor of Muslimov's age claim is an official passport that listed his birthdate. Muslimov had no known birth certificate.

Fame

The case of Muslimov became known in 1963, when a young photojournalist of TASS, Kalman Kaspiev, went to Barzavu to interview the centenarian. The story was picked up by the Soviet press, by the National Geographic, and by the Danone company, which for promotional reasons suggested that the longevity of Muslimov was linked to a diet of dairy, and yogurt in particular. This interest changed the life of the small Azeri village, which was connected to the electricity grid and started receiving radio and television broadcasts.

In the 1970s many Westerners were made aware of these extreme claims of longevity in Azerbaijan and elsewhere in the Caucasus region when a U.S. Danone yogurt commercial invoked some of these people to suggest that the secret of their long lives lay in the frequent consumption of yogurt.

See also

References

  1. Alexander Leaf, (Jan. 1973). "Search for the Oldest People". National Geographic, pp. 93-118.
  2. The Guinness Book of Records, 1974

External links