"Lucie P\u00E9r\u00E9-Pucheu"@en . . . . . "Lucie L\u00E9onie \"Anne\" P\u00E9r\u00E9-Pucheu (13 August 1893 \u2013 6 April 2006, Pau, Pyr\u00E9n\u00E9es-Atlantiques), was the vice- doyenne of France and, by a quirk of fate, also ranked as the second-oldest person in Western Europe when she died at 112 years 236 days old. P\u00E9r\u00E9-Pucheu was more than two years older than Germany's oldest person and well ahead of the UK's oldest person, born in 1895. She was a month older than the oldest persons in Portugal and Italy, and more than a year ahead of Spain's oldest-known person. Only fellow Frenchwoman and Parisian, Camille Loiseau, 114, ranked higher among verified living European supercentenarians. Anne lived in southwest France."@en . . . "Lucie L\u00E9onie \"Anne\" P\u00E9r\u00E9-Pucheu (13 August 1893 \u2013 6 April 2006, Pau, Pyr\u00E9n\u00E9es-Atlantiques), was the vice- doyenne of France and, by a quirk of fate, also ranked as the second-oldest person in Western Europe when she died at 112 years 236 days old. P\u00E9r\u00E9-Pucheu was more than two years older than Germany's oldest person and well ahead of the UK's oldest person, born in 1895. She was a month older than the oldest persons in Portugal and Italy, and more than a year ahead of Spain's oldest-known person. Only fellow Frenchwoman and Parisian, Camille Loiseau, 114, ranked higher among verified living European supercentenarians. Anne lived in southwest France."@en .