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Sarhat Rashidova

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Sarhat Rashidova
Born1875?
Dagestan, Russian Empire
💀DiedJanuary 16, 2007(2007-01-16) (aged 131–132)
Dagestan, RussiaJanuary 16, 2007(2007-01-16) (aged 131–132)
💼 Occupation
Known forallegedly being one of the world's oldest people

Sarhat Ibrahimovna Rashidova (Russian: Сархат Ибрагимовна Рашидова, Azeri: Sərhət İbrahim qızı Rəşidova) (1875? – 16 January 2007) was an ethnic Azeri woman who lived in the Dagestan Republic in Russia and who was said by some people to have been the world's oldest living person prior to her death. According to her passport, issued by Dagestani authorities, she was 131 at the time of her death. Rashidova got attention from the Russian media when the local authorities were replacing her expired Soviet passport with a Russian one. The year of 1875 written as her date of birth was thought to have been a mistake until an investigation was carried out proving the original data accurate, according to those authorities.

Biography[edit]

Rashidova claimed to have been born in Zidyan (near Derbent), Dagestan, Russia c. 1875 and to have grown up an orphan. Her only husband, who was already a widower when he married her, died in the 1950s. Despite living in Russia, she only spoke her native Azeri. She never had any children of her own, but raised five children from her husband's first marriage. Rashidova spent most of her life in pise-walled house in a remote village of Zidyan, which is situated between the Caucasus mountains and the Caspian Sea and in 2007, had a total population of ten families. She died while visiting her family in the neighbouring town of in Dagestanskiye Ogni.

According to her friends and family, she never had any diseases, nor complained of any pain, nor took ingested medicines. Her diet mainly included chicken, eggs and milk. A little before her demise, her state of health was considered satisfactory by her nurse, though her vision got worse. Rashidova worked until recently in a kolkhoz (agricultural co-operative), and took care of four cows, as well as geese and chicken. On the week preceding her death, the local authorities expressed the intention to have her included in the Guinness Book of World Records as the oldest living person.

In January 2007, officially and according to confirmed sources, the oldest person in the world was Puerto Rican Emiliano Mercado del Toro, 115 years old, and the oldest woman was Canadian Julie Winnefred Bertrand, born one month after. Both died several days after Rashidova's death. The confirmed oldest person in the world ever was Frenchwoman Jeanne Calment, who lived to the age of 122.

The Caucasus mountains are claimed to be the home of some of the oldest living people in the Earth due to geographical isolation and their millenarian habits, perfect antidotes against anxiety and stress, according to some specialists.[1] Research in the past 30 years (since 1979) has indicated that extreme age claims in the Caucasus could be false, and the reason people 'live so long' is that they inflate their age in a culture that values extreme age.[2]

See also[edit]

Notes[edit]

  1. (in Portuguese) A 131-Year Old Woman Dies in Russia, O Estado de S. Paulo, January 17, 2007
  2. (in English) No Methuselahs, Time, August 12, 1974

Sources[edit]

External links[edit]


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