Superiorshortness
Making the rounds.
Okay, no one older except her and any leftovers from the same generation, my bad.
Yeah, that's the one from the movie-only props. I'm inclined to go with a long lifespan, but only for really powerful wizards, and never enough to eclipse the Elixir of Life. Otherwise the family trees we see in canon wouldn't have so many generations and changes of leadership over time. The natural deaths and power changeovers don't happen nearly rarely enough for multi-century lifespans to be credibly considered standard. Hell, the Black and Potters seem to advance and expire generationally at a rate pretty much similar to normal people, even when murder isn't involved.
One of my biggest questions in the Wizarding world with large lifespans is that Rowling really failed to show the large connected families that would come with those lifespans. Where are the great great grandparents and grand uncles and aunts? The big families? We generally only see a grandparent at best. .. even if Bathilda Bagshot was the eldest at 120 something, the so much higher medical care and good health of the elderly should show us with many older folks in the magical world. In real life, having grandkids and great grandkids is an accomishment. It's always been odd that much better health older folk in Rowlings world are absent past grandparents at best. I usually just take to the fact that Rowling was not the greatest world builder, but always been an odd thing to me that Wizengamot and the Wizarding world in general are not dominated by the very elderly. Power after all in this world requires very little physical ability