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  • 2022-02-05 (xsd:date)
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  • Was Adam Rainer Born a Dwarf but Died a Giant? (en)
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  • The strange story of Adam Rainer is one that often gets repeated online. In 1899, as the story goes, Rainer was born in southern Austria where he lived the first years of his life as a dwarf. Rainer was only 4 1/2 feet tall at the age of 19, but he soon experienced an unprecedented growth spurt. By age 30, Rainer stood at more than 7 feet tall, and was classified as a giant. While the general gist of this story is true — Rainer was a real person who was classified as both a dwarf and a giant during his life — social media posts about this extraordinary human often include miscaptioned images. There aren't too many authentic photographs of Rainer. While we found a few that were published in a medical journal in the 1950s (you can see those later in the article), many of the photographs supposedly showing Rainer actually show Baptiste Hugo, a Frenchman who, along with his brother Antoine, was known as one of the Giants of the Alps. Baptiste, the taller of the brothers, appeared at circus freak shows in the early 1900s, but he was probably most famous for posing for a series of a postcards that showcased his gigantic size. Here's one photograph of the Hugo family. Baptiste and Antoine are the two in the ... well, you can probably figure it out. While contemporaneous rumors pegged his height at more than 12 feet tall, the Hugos were likely around 8 feet tall. An obituary for Baptiste published in 1916 stated that he was 8 feet, 4 inches tall, and that there wasn't a casket on Earth that could hold his body: 24 Apr 1916, Mon Lincoln Journal Star (Lincoln, Nebraska) Newspapers.com At least one other photograph of Baptiste has been miscaptioned on social media and shared as if it showed Rainer. The following picture is often shared as if the person on the left is Rainer when he was a dwarf, and the person on the right is Rainer when he was a giant. In reality, neither of these people are Rainer. The man on the left, again, is Baptiste Hugo. The man on the right is likely little Adriene, a dwarf who was often photographed with Hugo. Another set of images supposedly showed Rainer during his unprecedented growth spurt. Again, these images do not show Rainer: While this image set truly shows a case of acromegaly, the condition that spurred Rainer's gigantism, the person in these photographs is not Rainer. These pictures were originally published in the 1916 book The Endocrine Organs: An Introduction to the Study of Internal Secretion, by Edward Albert Sharpey-Schafer. The name of this person was not provided in the book, but his age (42 in the final picture) does not match up with Rainer's (who was born in 1899 and would have been 17 when these images were first published). We've only been able to verify a single set of photographs that truly show Adam Rainer. In 1961, Oscar Hirsch published a paper that examined Rainer's condition. The following three photographs are the only images of Rainer that we've been able to verify. While we haven't been able to verify any photographs of Rainer when he was a dwarf, the following photographs are likely genuine. These images were included on a page dedicated to Rainer on the since-defunct website Tallestman.com, a website dedicated to documenting the history of giants. While these photos are likely genuine (Tallestman.com has a good track record and correctly labeled the photographs of Baptiste), we have not been able to find the original source. If you know where these pictures were originally published, please contact us. Adam Rainer was both a dwarf and a giant during different periods of his life, but is he the only person in history to fall into both of these categories? As far as we can tell, yes. We haven't been able to find any records of any other person who was recorded as both a giant and a dwarf. Hirsch wrote in 1961: Guinness World Records also notes that Rainer was a dwarf during the first 20 or so years of his life, before experiencing unprecedented growth and dying a giant. The sizes included in Guinness, however, are a little different than those quoted above. Guinness wrote in 1973: Rainer's drastic growth is an extreme example of acromegaly, a hormonal disorder that develops when your pituitary gland produces too much growth hormone during adulthood, according to the Mayo Clinic . While Rainer's growth was undoubtedly painful, Hirsch disputed the account that Rainer was bedridden during the later years of his life, writing: (en)
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