Is THIS the world’s oldest man? 4ft 2in orphan & retired brickie who can’t read celebrates staggering birthday milestone

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The man claims to have been born during the reign of Queen Victoria

  • Published: 20:00, 7 Apr 2025
  • Updated: 20:10, 7 Apr 2025
An image collage containing 3 images, Image 1 shows Marcelino Abad Tolentino, 125, at his birthday celebration, Image 2 shows A 124-year-old Peruvian farmer walking in a forest with two dogs, Image 3 shows Elderly man in a wheelchair holding an award

A TINY retired brick layer claims to be the oldest person on Earth after apparently celebrating his 125th birthday.

Marcelino "Mashico" Abad Tolentino, who is just 4ft 2in tall, beamed at his care-home party in Cochachinche, central Peru, to mark the milestone.

Marcelino Abad Tolentino, 125, at his birthday celebration.

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Marcelino "Mashico" Abad Tolentino celebrated his 125th birthday at his care home in PeruCredit: Jam Press/Pensi�n 65

Elderly man in a wheelchair holding an award.

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While his birth date has not been officially confirmed, Mashico claims to have been born in 1900Credit: Jam Press

A 124-year-old Peruvian farmer walking in a forest with two dogs.

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Mashico has worked hard all his life as a bricklayer and a farmerCredit: Jam Press

Mashico, who cannot read, has toiled in the Peruvian countryside his entire life, splitting his time between bricklaying and farming.

He lived out a simple existence, and never married and or had children.

The Peruvian says he was born way back on April 5, 1900 - though this has not been verified by the Guinness Book of Records.

The record board currently recognises 116-year-old Sister Inah Canabarro Lucas from Brazil as the oldest living human.

And it will be difficult to check Mashico's claim as the OAP doesn't have a birth certificate.

But his age is in no doubt in Peru, where the government has issued him a national ID featuring the 1900 birth date.

Last year, the government attributed Mashico's longevity to a life lived "among the tranquillity of the flora and fauna of Huanuco".

The statement said he had developed a "healthy way of life and inner peace, reflected in his good health and friendly personality".

Mashico was born in the remote Chaglla District - which sits at nearly 10,000ft - and was orphaned at just seven years old.

His parents tragically died while trying to cross a river.

New 'world’s oldest man', 112, insists he's ‘most handsome OAP in care home’

And he never attended school growing up, because the journey was too far.

Instead, he began working the fields, rearing animals and selling produce.

Mashico says one of the secret to his staggering age is eating plenty of fruit and lamb.

Chewing coca leaves has also been a life-long habit - something popular amongst locals to give them an energy boost while labouring.

His diet also involved plenty of herbs and medicinal plants he gathered in the wilderness.

Marcelino Abad Tolentino's Peruvian identification card.

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The Peruvian government issues Mashico with a national ID card stating his birthday as April 5, 1900Credit: Jam Press

A man holding fruit from his garden.

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Mashico is said to love avocado - which he has every morning for breakfastCredit: Jam Press

Portrait of Tomiko Itooka, the world's oldest person.

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The world's oldest person, Japanese OAP Tomiko Itooka, passed away at her care home on December 29Credit: Gerontology Research Group

Dolores Pérez - the cook at his care home - told local media: “He always asks for avocado in the mornings for breakfast.

“He can’t live without his avocado.”

Rosemberg Valverde Cruz, who brought Mashico to the world's attention in 2019, said: "He has survived two World Wars, pandemics, and although his story is going viral, he spent more than a century without access to electricity.

"He does not know the internet, mobile phones or instant food, he kept to nature, living off the fruits of his crops such as oranges, bananas and avocados, as well as small farmyard animals and cooking with firewood.

"He has been an orphan since childhood. Although he does not speak fluently and can no longer hear well, he says that his parents 'were taken away by the river' when he was seven years old."

The official world record for the world's oldest person is currently held by 116-year-old Brazilian nun Inah Canabarro Lucas, who took the crown when Tomiko Itooka of Japan died in December.

And the official oldest living man is João Marinho Neto, also of Brazil, at 112.

If Mashico's age is verified, he would smash both those records, as well as that of the oldest person ever to have lived.

The oldest officially-verified age a human has reached is 122 years and 164 days.

The phenomenal life was lived by a French woman called Jeanne Calment.

World’s oldest people

THE top five officially-recognised oldest people in the world are all women and come from across three different continents.

Inah Canabarro Lucas - Born on June 8, 1908, she is the new oldest person alive. She became a nun in the 1920s and is currently 116 years old.

Ethel Caterham - Born on August 21, 1909, she is the oldest person living in the UK and has spent more than the last 50 years living in Surrey, England. She is currently 115 years old.

Okagi Hayashi - Born on September 2, 1909, she is now the third oldest person and is also from Japan. Hayashi had 8 children, 22 grandchildren, 39 great-grandchildren and 5 great-great-grandchildren. She is currently 115 years old.

Marie-Rose Tessier - The Frenchwoman is nearly 115 and holds the record as France's oldest person. She was born May 21, 1910 and has been a widow since her husband died in 1944.

Mine Kondo - The Japanese supercentenarian was born on September 1, 1910 making her 114 years old. She is currently the oldest known living person in Aichi Prefecture.

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