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Chang and Eng Bunker
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{{Short description|Thai-American conjoined twins (1811–1874)}} {{Redirect|Chang and Eng}} {{Infobox person | name = Chang and Eng Bunker | image = ChangandEng.jpg | image_upright = 1.1 | alt = 60-ish year old conjoined twin brothers wearing a suit and facing the camera | caption = Eng (left) and Chang (right) in later years | birth_date = May 11, 1811 | birth_place = [[Samut Songkhram Province|Samut Songkhram]], [[Rattanakosin Kingdom (1782–1932)|Rattanakosin Kingdom]] ([[Siam]]) | death_date = {{Death date and given age|1874|01|17|62}} | death_place = [[Mount Airy, North Carolina]], U.S. | death_cause = Chang: [[Cerebral venous sinus thrombosis|Cerebral blood clot]]<br />Eng: [[Voodoo death|Fright]] | resting_place = White Plains Baptist Church, [[Mount Airy, North Carolina|Mount Airy, N.C.]] | resting_place_coordinates = {{coord|36.4536|-80.6288|type:landmark|display=inline}}<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.atlasobscura.com/places/the-grave-of-chang-eng-bunker|title=The Grave of Chang and Eng Bunker|website=[[Atlas Obscura]]|access-date=July 18, 2018|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20180719054327/https://www.atlasobscura.com/places/the-grave-of-chang-eng-bunker|archive-date=July 19, 2018|url-status=live|df=mdy-all}}</ref> | years_active = 1829–1870 | known_for = Exhibitions as curiosities, and known as the original "Siamese twins" | spouse = Chang: Adelaide Yates<br />Eng: Sarah Yates<br />(both {{Abbr|m.|married}} 1843) | children = Chang: 10<br />Eng: 11 }} '''Chang Bunker (จัน บังเกอร์)''' and '''Eng Bunker (อิน บังเกอร์)''' (May 11, 1811 – January 17, 1874) were Siamese (Thai)-American [[conjoined twins|conjoined twin]] brothers whose fame propelled the expression "Siamese twins" to become synonymous for conjoined twins in general. They were widely exhibited as curiosities and were "two of the nineteenth century's most studied human beings".{{sfn|Bogdan|1990|loc=p. 296, note 1}} The brothers were born with Chinese ancestry in Siam (now known as [[Thailand]]) and were brought to the United States in 1829. Physicians inspected them as they became known to American and European audiences in "[[freak show]]s".{{sfn|Bogdan|1990|p=12}} Newspapers and the public were initially sympathetic to them, and within three years they left the control of their managers, who they thought were cheating them, and toured on their own. In early exhibitions, they were exoticized and displayed their athleticism; they later held conversations in English in a more dignified parlor setting. In 1839, after a decade of financial success, the twins quit touring and settled near [[Mount Airy, North Carolina]]. They became American citizens, [[Slavery in the United States|bought slaves]], married local sisters, and fathered 21 children, several of whom accompanied them when they resumed touring. Chang and Eng's respective families lived in separate houses, where the twins took alternating three-day stays. After the [[American Civil War|Civil War]], they lost part of their wealth and their slaves. Eng died hours after Chang at the age of 62. An autopsy revealed that their livers were fused in the ligament connecting their sterna. The novelist [[Darin Strauss]] writes, "their conjoined history was a confusion of legend, sideshow hyperbole, and editorial invention even while they lived."{{sfn|Quigley|2012|p=22}} Many works have fictionalized the Bunkers' lives, often to symbolize cooperation or discord, notably in representing the Union and Confederacy during the Civil War.
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