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[[File:Storstina.jpg|thumb|Monument over Stor-Stina at Brännäs in Malå.]]
[[File:Storstina.jpg|thumb|Monument over Stor-Stina at Brännäs in Malå.]]
'''Kristina Katarina '''"'''Stina Kajsa'''"''' Larsdotter''' (19 January 1819, in [[Brännäs]], [[Malå]] – 27 May 1854), known as '''Långa lappflickan''' (The Tall Laponia Girl), '''The Lapland Giantess''', and '''Stor-Stina''' (Big Stina), was a [[Sámi peoples|Sámi]] woman from [[Sweden]], who aroused great attention among her contemporaries because of her height. She was {{convert|210|cm|ftin|abbr=off}} tall. From 1837 onward, she toured Sweden, [[Great Britain]], [[Denmark]], [[France]] and [[Russia]] exhibiting herself for money under the stage name "The Lapland Giantess - Tallest Woman in the World".
'''Kristina Katarina '''"'''Stina Kajsa'''"''' Larsdotter''' (19 January 1819, in [[Brännäs]], [[Malå]] – 27 May 1854), known as '''Långa lappflickan''' (The Tall Laponia Girl), '''The Lapland Giantess''', and '''Stor-Stina''' (Big Stina), was a [[Sámi peoples|Sámi]] woman from [[Sweden]], who aroused great attention among her contemporaries because of her height. She presumably suffered from a case of [[gigantism]] and never stopped growing, her last known height was {{convert|218|cm|ftin|abbr=off}} shortly before her death. From 1837 onward, she toured Sweden, [[Great Britain]], [[Denmark]], [[France]] and [[Russia]] exhibiting herself for money under the stage name "The Lapland Giantess - Tallest Woman in the World".


Stor-Stina eventually returned to her family in Brännäs in Malå. She died of gangrene.
Stor-Stina eventually returned to her family in Brännäs in Malå. She died of gangrene.
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==References==
==References==
* Stina Kajsa i Wilhelmina Stålberg, Anteckningar om svenska qvinnor (1864)
* Stina Kajsa i Wilhelmina Stålberg, Anteckningar om svenska qvinnor (1864)
*[http://www.akelundgren.se/bakgrunder02.htm Åke Lundgren om bakgrunden till Långa lappflickan]
*[http://www.akelundgren.se/bakgrunder.html Åke Lundgren ''Sápmis jättinna (The Lapland giantess)'']
*[http://www.modernamuseet.se/Stockholm/Gamla-utstallningar/2004/Svenska-Hjartan/Hjartan/Mattias-Olofsson/ Mattias Olofssons performance om Stor-Stina]
*[http://www.modernamuseet.se/Stockholm/Gamla-utstallningar/2004/Svenska-Hjartan/Hjartan/Mattias-Olofsson/ Mattias Olofssons performance om Stor-Stina] {{dead link|date=13 December 24}}


==Further reading==
==Further reading==

Revision as of 12:29, 13 December 2024

Monument over Stor-Stina at Brännäs in Malå.

Kristina Katarina "Stina Kajsa" Larsdotter (19 January 1819, in Brännäs, Malå – 27 May 1854), known as Långa lappflickan (The Tall Laponia Girl), The Lapland Giantess, and Stor-Stina (Big Stina), was a Sámi woman from Sweden, who aroused great attention among her contemporaries because of her height. She presumably suffered from a case of gigantism and never stopped growing, her last known height was 218 centimetres (7 feet 2 inches) shortly before her death. From 1837 onward, she toured Sweden, Great Britain, Denmark, France and Russia exhibiting herself for money under the stage name "The Lapland Giantess - Tallest Woman in the World".

Stor-Stina eventually returned to her family in Brännäs in Malå. She died of gangrene.

She is portrayed in the 1981 novel Långa lappflickan by Åke Lundgren, and in the 2012 novel Rekviem för en vanskapt by Mattias Hagberg.

References

Further reading