reply to post by MountainStar
You know, I googled a bit and found it suspicious that their name would only appear in a few documents (in Spanish) retelling the same story... Not a
good sign.
But then I changed the name to "Timisoara", which is how the Romanians call the town, and... who would've thought it?
Apparently, there is even a painting of them - which is relevant because it shows how well-know they were (regardless of the veracity of the story
about the age itself).
AHS - summary (same as below)
Janos and Sara Rovin: Forgotten Painting from the Collection of Emperor Charles VI and its Author Carolus Unterhuber
The painting Janos and Sara Rovin (signed: Carolus Unterhuber, dated 1695) is a genre portrait of a couple who were, according to the inscription
in the painting, married for 147 years and lived in Szadova near Timişoara (present-day Romania). Due to later interventions in the inscription, the
date is unreliable. In 1720 the painting was documented in Viennese imperial collection and it was then the first work that could be seen by the
visitors of the gallery. The Rovins were in the 1720s often used as an example of longevity, and several versions of the portrait existed, including
prints. Two other genre paintings, Old Woman with a Hen and Old Man with Birds can be attributed to the same painter.
With these paintings, Carolus Unterhuber can be placed in the group of Central-European genre painters whose works reveal relations with Lombard genre
painting and combine elements of genre painting and portraiture. The painter can tentatively be identified with Karl Jakob Unterhuber (1700–1752),
who is generally better known for religious motifs and frescoes.
[edit on 26-1-2008 by Vanitas]






