Siah Khan

Siah Khan Ibn Kashmir Khan was a tall Persian man who lived in the Zarqan functions of Fars province in the early 20th century in Lepui, also suffered from physical and mental retardation and proteus syndrome.

Biography
Siah Khan was born in 1913 in the village of Lapui, in the Zarghan district of Fars province.

He grew normally until the age of six, but grew rapidly after that. His family migrated to Shiraz due to Siah Khan's poverty and physical problems, and earned money by displaying their large and unusual child in the streets.

At the end of September 1920, he was rented for some time by a person named Khoshorkhan for 6,000 Tomans to be exhibited in Tehran. Dr. Ghorban, the founder of the Shiraz Medical School, found him in 1931 and provided him with financial and medical support. When he was taken to the hospital, Siah Khan was hospitalized for the rest of his life and eventually died of pneumonia and sepsis in 1938. His skeletal remains are now on public display in a glass case at Shiraz's Medical School.

Height
Siah Khan often claimed 5ft 6in and 5ft 5in which if true would have made him easily the tallest person to ever live even dwarfing Robert Wadlow's height of 5ft 11+9/100in but Siah Khan was later measured in 1933 by his doctors at 7ft 2+1/2in, and later claimed to have grown to 8 ft 6. His arms measured 3 ft 10.06 in (117 cm), his legs were 4ft 1+1/4in long, his skull weighed 89/100 st andhe couldn't stand due his head being too heavy for him. His arms were reportedly so long that he had to wrap an arm once around his head to put food in his mouth.