Saturday, June 20, 2009
Tomoji Tanabe has died he was 113
Tomoji Tanabe the worlds oldest living man has died. Tanabe was a Japanese supercentenarian and, at the time of his death at age 113, the oldest living man in the world. Tanabe became the oldest man in Japan following the death of Nijiro Tokuda, who was 111 at the time, on 12 June 2006. Upon the death of 115-year-old Emiliano Mercado del Toro on 24 January 2007, he assumed the title of the oldest validated man in the world. He was the last verified man born in 1895.
(18 September 1895 – 19 June 2009)
Tanabe was the seventh-oldest validated person in the world and the third-oldest in Japan. In spite of being the youngest "oldest living man" since 1999 at his title accession in January 2007, at the time of his death, Tanabe ranked 10th among the oldest men ever and was only one day removed from tying American supercentenarian, Johnson Parks (1884–1998), at 9th. In addition, Tanabe is one of only eleven men ever to reach the verified age of 113 without dispute.
Born in Miyakonojo, Miyazaki Prefecture, Tanabe worked as a civil engineer at the city office.[1] He is survived by eight children, 25 grandchildren and 54 great-grandchildren.[2] He credited total abstinence from alcohol as the secret to his longevity.[3] On his 112th birthday, he stated: "I want to live forever. I don't want to die", as he received 100,000 yen ($870) and flowers from the local mayor. Tanabe (Guinness Book of World Records' oldest living male, June 2007) was "extremely healthy". He ate vegetables and drank milk daily.[4][5]
A former city land surveyor,[6] Tanabe, on his 113th birthday said "I am happy. I eat a lot. I don't want to die yet." Last year, he said he wanted to "live indefinitely."[7][8] Tanabe received a giant tea cup engraved with his name and date of birth plus birthday gifts, flowers and US $ 1,000 cash from Miyakonojo Mayor Makoto Nagamine. A Miyakonojo official said: "His favorite food is fried shrimp, but we've heard that he's cut back on oily food. He's said he wants to live for another 10 years, that he doesn't want to die."[9]
However after his last birthday, Tanabe's health went down quickly. He had mostly been bed-ridden since early May 2009 and could not eat, due to a chronical heart condition. On June 19, 2009, Tanabe died in his sleep of heart failure at his home in southern Japan. He was 113 years, 274 days old.[10] Upon Tanabe's death, English World War I veteran Henry Allingham, age 113, became the world's oldest living man.
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