A man believed to be the tallest on the planet at 8ft 4 inches has died aged 44.
Leonid Stadnyk, who was said to be too shy to measured for the Guinness World record books, was 21 inches taller than lanky England footballer Peter Crouch.
The peasant farmer, from the Ukrainian village of Podoliantsy , died yesterday from a brain haemorrhage after health problems.
Of his size, Leonid had
said: "To me, my height is a curse, a punishment from God, not something
to celebrate. What sin I have committed, I do not know. All my life I have
dreamed of being just like everyone else." Continue...
He added: "I don't
want or need the fame that this would bring so I have no desire to be in this
Guinness book."
He was scared to commit
to women "because I don't want to inflict my problems on a wife. I think
it would not be fair on her", he said.
His astonishing rise to
fame began at 12, when a benign brain tumour over-stimulated his body's
production of a growth hormone.
At one point, his
condition, called giganticism, left him growing at the rate of roughly a foot
every three years.
He wore size 27 shoes
(in UK
sizes) for feet that measured almost 18 inches in length while his palms were
more than a foot in diameter.
But unable to
independently verify his measurements, Guinness instead officially listed Xi
Shin at fractionally under 7ft 9 inches as the world's tallest man.
"But gradually I
found that I couldn't get the shoes I needed in winter to protect me from the
frostbite. I just couldn't keep on with this work."
He took over the family
smallholding.
"Stooping from my
height to pull up the weeds is not easy, I can tell you. It puts a lot of
strain on my back," he said.
"I know I'm the
tallest man but at the same I often feel one of the most helpless. This life is
for smaller people."
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