A Spanish village declared a day of mourning on Tuesday following
the death of Francisco Nunez Olivera, a retired farmer billed as “the
world’s oldest man”.
He passed away just over a month after turning 113.
Olivera, who was 10 years old when World War I broke out, died on
Monday in the village of Bienvenida in southwestern Spain where he had
lived throughout his life, village mayor Antonio Carmona told AFP.
“It’s a very cold day and most of all a very sad day,” Carmona said.
Born on December 13, 1904, relatives credited Nunez Olivera’s long
life to a diet based on vegetables he grew on his own land and a daily
glass of red wine.
Every morning for breakfast, he would have sponge cake made with
olive oil and a glass of milk. And until the age of 107, he went out for
daily walks by himself, according to Spanish media reports published
when he celebrated his last birthday.
While the Spanish media described Nunez Olivera as the world’s oldest
man, his name did not appear on a list kept by the Gerontology Research
Group, which validates the ages of the world’s longest-living people.
The US-based group lists Japan’s Masazou Nonaka, born on July 25,
1905 making him 112, as the world’s oldest man but Carmona said there
were documents to prove the Spaniard was in fact older. It also lists a
Japanese woman, aged 117, as the world’s oldest person.
“We were in the process of applying for him to enter into the
Guinness Book of World Records. It meant a lot to his neighbours to be
represented by the oldest man in the world,” Carmona said.
Proving Nunez Olivera’s exact age has been complicated by the fact
that most of Bienvenida’s public archives were destroyed during Spain’s
1936-39 civil war, according to newspaper El Mundo.
Nunez Olivera, known in the village as Marchena due to his likeness
to a Spanish flamenco singer who used that stage name, had been a
widower since 1988.
He fought in the Rif War in the first half of the 1920s between Spain
and the Berber tribes of the Rif mountains in Morocco and survived
General Francisco Franco’s 1936-75 dictatorship.
He was one of 32 people over the age of 90 among the roughly 2 200
inhabitants of the village, according to El Mundo. Spain has one of the
highest life expectancies in the world, which doctors often attribute to
the country’s Mediterranean diet. — AFP.
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