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Barbara Moore, born Anna Cherkasova ((ロシア語:Анна Черкасова); 22 December 1903 – 14 May 1977), was a Russian-born British engineer who gained celebrity in the early 1960s for her long-distance walking and health beliefs. ==Biography== Moore was among the first generation of Soviet female engineers after the Russian Revolution. In 1932, she became the Soviet Union's long-distance motorcycle champion. She immigrated to Great Britain in 1939, marrying an art teacher, Harry Moore. They later separated.〔 In December 1959, she walked from Edinburgh to London. In early 1960, she walked from John o'Groats to Land's End in 23 days. She then undertook a 46-day, 3,387-mile walk from San Francisco to New York City, where she arrived on 6 July 1960. She was a vegetarian and a breatharian, believing it is possible for people to survive without food.〔 She walked with only nuts, honey, raw fruit and vegetable juice for nourishment. Moore held that people could live to be 200 years old by abstaining from smoking, drinking alcohol and sex. She claimed she had cured herself of leukemia by way of a special diet.〔 To test her health theories, she planned to build a laboratory next door to her home in Frimley. She was soon drawn into a lengthy legal battle over a sewer and access roads for a nearby housing estate. She spent years and her life savings fighting her case, but ultimately lost in the High Court of Justice. She was jailed for contempt of court after she refused to accept the ruling.〔 She died in a London hospital on 14 May 1977, bankrupt and near starvation because of her refusal to eat.〔 Her John o'Groats to Land's End walk caught the attention of Harry Griffin, who advocated a revival of the Bob Graham Round as possibly a much sterner test of fitness.〔Roger Smith, foreword by A H Griffin (1982), ''42 Peaks: The story of the Bob Graham Round''〕 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「Barbara Moore (vegetarian)」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
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