Toronto Star

World’s oldest woman lied about age, researcher says

Jeanne Calment was 122 when she died, but a new theory claims she was 99

- ELI ROSENBERG THE WASHINGTON POST

Jeanne Calment died in 1997 in the southern French town in which she was born, and her death drew a flurry of attention.

At 122, an age that had been certified by the Guinness World Records as well as public health researcher­s, she was the oldest documented person to ever have lived.

But a Russian mathematic­ian is casting doubt on her record. Nikolay Zak, of the Moscow Center For Continuous Mathematic­al Education, said in a report that he believes that Calment was actually Yvonne Calment, Jeanne’s daughter, who had assumed her mother’s identity to avoid inheritanc­e taxes in the 1930s. That would have made her 99 when she died. The evidence produced by Zak in a paper published recently on the portal ResearchGa­te is not definitive.

He points to studies that showed that Calment had lost less than an inch of her height by the time she was well into her hundreds, significan­tly less than what would have been expected; Yvonne was also taller than Jeanne, he says. A passport for Jeanne in the 1930s lists different eye colours for her than she had later in life. And he raises questions about other physical discrepanc­ies in her forehead and chin. He also claims that Calment had destroyed photograph­s and other family documents when she had been requested to send them to the archives in Arles.

The study has caused a global stir since it was issued. It has been covered by news media organizati­ons around the world. Sample headline: “Jeanne Calment cheater?” France Inter radio asked. But it has been denounced by some scientists, including the JeanMarie Robine, who validated Calment’s age and wrote a book about her around the time of her death.

“All of this is incredibly shaky and rests on nothing,” Robine told Le Parisien.

According to Smithsonia­n magazine, he said Jeanne answered questions when he interviewe­d her that only she would have known the answer to, like the name of her math teacher and housekeepe­rs in her building at the time.

“Her daughter couldn’t have known that,” he said. And he said that the whole town of Arles would have been in on the ruse. “Can you imagine how many people would have lied? Overnight, Fernand Calment (Jeanne’s husband) would have passed his daughter for his wife and everyone would have kept silent?” Robine said. “It is staggering.”

Michel Vauzelle, who was the mayor of Arles when Calment died, has said the Russian’s theory is “completely impossible and ridiculous.”

Nicolas Brouard, research director at France’s National Demographi­cs Studies Institute said that there are some in the research community who are in “favour of exhuming the bodies of Jeanne and Yvonne Calment” because of Zak’s study, according to French public radio broadcaste­r RFI. He also said that DNA testing could settle the debate.

In an email, Zak told the Washington Post that he became convinced that Calment’s age was suspicious in February while studying mortality patterns of people older than 105. He said he started to investigat­e her life in September.

“I funded the work myself, it was a fascinatin­g detective story in front of me,” he said. “Those who criticize my work heavily are those who have a huge conflict of interest or those who didn’t read it.”

He called critics of his report “dishonest,” and released a document where he sought to rebut their rebuttals point by point.

Still, he admitted to Reuters that he does not have “cast-iron proof.”

 ?? JACQUES DEMARTHON AFP/GETTY IMAGES ?? A mathematic­ian claims Calment’s daughter assumed her mother’s identity.
JACQUES DEMARTHON AFP/GETTY IMAGES A mathematic­ian claims Calment’s daughter assumed her mother’s identity.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada