Morano was born
in November 1899, four years before the Wright brothers first
took to the air. Her life has spanned three centuries, two World
Wars and over 90 Italian governments.
Friends, neighbors and her doctor gathered in her small
apartment in the northern town of Verbania, on the shores of
Lake Maggiore, to mark the latest milestone, presenting her with
a large white birthday cake.
"My life wasn't so nice," she told Reuters TV as she sat in an
armchair by her window, a white shawl over her shoulders. "I
worked in a factory until I was 65, then that was that."
In an interview with La Stampa newspaper five years ago she said
her fiance had died in World War One and that she had then been
forced to marry a man she did not love.
"'Either you agree to marry me or I will kill you'," Morano
said, recalling his proposal. "I was 26. We got married."
It was not a happy marriage. They had a boy in 1937, but the
baby died after just six months and the following year Morano
kicked out her abusive husband. "I separated from him in 1938. I
think I was one of the first in Italy to do that."
Morano lives alone and has outlived all her eight brothers and
sisters, including one who died at 102. She has thrived despite
an unorthodox, unbalanced diet.
"When I first knew her she used to eat three eggs a day. Two
raw, and one fried. Today she has slowed down a bit, reducing
the number to two some days because she says three can be too
much," her doctor Carlo Bava told Reuters TV.
"She has never eaten much fruit or vegetables. Her
characteristic is that she always eats the same thing, every
day, every week, every month and every year."
(Reporting by Crispian Balmer; editing by Mark Heinrich)
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