Chandra Bahadur Dangi

Chandra Bahadur Dangi (30 November 1939 – 3 September 2015) (चन्द्रबहादुर डाँगी,, or ) was a Nepali man who was the shortest man in recorded history, measuring 54.6cm. He broke the record previously set by Gul Mohammed (1957–1997), whose height was 57cm.

Dangi came to the attention of the media when a wood contractor saw him in his village in the Dang district of Nepal. He was awarded the title of shortest adult human ever recorded, after his height was measured in February 2012. He was subsequently included in the Guinness World Records.

Biography
Dangi was born in Salyan, Salyan District, Nepal, on 30 November 1939. It is unknown what medical condition stunted his growth. He had five brothers and two sisters. Three of his five brothers were less than 1.22 m tall, while his sisters and two other brothers were of normal height.

He lived in a remote village, Reemkholi, approximately 400 km away from Kathmandu, Nepal's capital. Before being recognised by Guinness World Records as the world's shortest man in 2012, he had never left his home village. He was a weaver by trade. After being awarded the title, he said he had always wished to travel to all parts of his country and the world. He stated that being the shortest man in the world and a citizen of Nepal, he wanted to use his status to popularise his country.

In 2012, at the age of 72, Dangi met the world's shortest woman, Jyoti Amge of Nagpur, India. The pair posed together for the 57th edition of The Guinness Book of Records in 2013. On 13 November 2014, as part of Guinness World Records Day, Dangi met the world's tallest living man, Sultan Kösen, at an event in London.

Dangi died in American Samoa on 3 September 2015 at the age of 75, at the Lyndon B. Johnson Tropical Medical Hospital in Pago Pago. The exact cause of his death was not disclosed, although The Kathmandu Post reported that he had previously been suffering from pneumonia. He had been touring the South Pacific for much of the year with Samoa's Tupa'l Bruno's Magic Circus.