The world’s leaning tower is in Gau-Weinheim, not in Pisa

The most leaning tower in the world is in Rhineland-Palatinate. This has been official since Sunday.

This tower in the municipality of Gau-Weinheim in the Rhineland-Palatinate district of Alzey-Worms is now officially the world’s most leaning tower.

(dpa) Due to the inclination of 5.4277 degrees, the record goes to the municipality of Gau-Weinheim in the Alzey-Worms district. To confirm the record, the certificate was presented by the Record Institute for Germany (RID) on Sunday at the “Day of the Open Monument”.

According to RID, a measurement in July had already confirmed the inclination of the tower next to a church. The 600-inhabitant community thus replaces the East Frisian Suurhusen. There is a tower with an inclination of 5.19 degrees. According to the record institute, the tower in Pisa only has an inclination of 3.97 degrees after renovation.

“The officially most leaning tower in the world has not been the one in Pisa for a number of years, even if popular opinion still says otherwise,” explained RID record judge Olaf Kuebecker. Already in 2007, Pisa was replaced by the tower in Suurhusen. “I am very pleased to personally certify the world record today and to award the local community with an RID record certificate.”

The second most leaning tower is in Dausenau

The congregation in Suurhusen takes the loss of the title with a bit of melancholy, but also calmly. “It’s a fair competition and only one can win, that’s the way it is,” said the pastor of the parish, Frank Wessels, on request. “We carried the title with pride and dignity for 15 years. And if someone else can now prove that the leaning tower is there, then we accept that and congratulate from the bottom of our hearts.”

Gau-Weinheim is not the only place in Rhineland-Palatinate with a leaning tower. According to the Historical Dausenau Association, in the village of Dausenau on the Lahn there is a tower with an inclination of 5.22 degrees – and thus also more slate than the leaning towers of Pisa and Suurhusen.

source site-111