Geographical midpoint of Europe
The location of the geographical centre of Europe depends on the definition of the borders of Europe, mainly whether remote islands are included to define the extreme points of Europe, and on the method of calculating the final result. Thus, several places claim to host this hypothetical centre.
The first official declaration of the Centre of Europe was made in 1775 by the Polish royal astronomer and cartographer Szymon Antoni Sobiekrajski, who calculated it to be in the town of Suchowola[1] near Białystok in modern north-eastern Poland. The method used was that of calculating equal distances from the extreme points of Europe: the westernmost point in Portugal; the easternmost point in the Central Urals; the northernmost point in Norway; and the southernmost point in Greece (islands were not taken into consideration). There is a monument commemorating that definition in Suchowola 53°34′39″N 23°06′22″E / 53.57750°N 23.10611°E.
Current claimants
Locations currently vying for the distinction of being the centre of Europe include:
- the village of Kremnické Bane or the neighbouring village Krahule, near Kremnica, in central Slovakia[2]
- the small town of Rakhiv, or the village of Dilove near Rakhiv, in western Ukraine[3]
- the village of Girija, near Vilnius, in Lithuania[4][5]
- a point on the island of Saaremaa in Estonia[6]
- a point near Polotsk, or in Vitebsk, or near Babruysk, or near lake Sho in Belarus[7]
- a point near the town of Tállya, in north-eastern Hungary[8]
Guinness World Records recognises Girija, as the official geographical midpoint of Europe,[9] but that does not preclude other centres, depending on the methodology used in making the determination.
Extreme points of Europe
History of claims
The first official declaration of the Centre of Europe was made in 1775 by the Polish royal astronomer and cartographer Szymon Antoni Sobiekrajski, who calculated it to be in the town of Suchowola[1] near Białystok in modern north-eastern Poland. The method used was that of calculating equal distances from the extreme points of Europe: the westernmost point in Portugal; the easternmost point in the Central Urals; the northernmost point in Norway; and the southernmost point in Greece (islands were not taken into consideration). There is a monument commemorating that definition in Suchowola 53°34′39″N 23°06′22″E / 53.57750°N 23.10611°E.
In about 1815 there was a declaration that the centre of Europe was located near the mining town of Kremnica, on a hill that forms the water division between the basins of the Baltic Sea and Black Sea, near St. John Baptist Church. The method used for calculating is unknown, but from the description given on the commemorative plaque located near the church 48°44′37″N 18°55′50″E / 48.74361°N 18.93056°E, it seems that it has been the centre of the smallest circle circumscribed on Europe (yet the limits of Europe taken into consideration are not known). The title of the "Centre of Europe" is also claimed by the neighbouring village Krahule (ancient Blaufuß), which used to belong to the same parish, now a famous centre for winter sports, with a hotel and recreation centre called "Stred Európy" ("Centre of Europe").
Transcarpathia, modern day Ukraine
In 1887, geographers from the Austro-Hungarian Empire set up a historical marker and a large stone in what is today a part of Ukraine, believed to mark the geographic centre of Europe. The interpretation of the worn Latin inscription on the monument is debated, with some claiming that the marker is merely one of a number of fixed triangulation points for surveying purposes established around the territory of the former empire. The external borders of Europe taken into account during the calculations are not known. According to the description, the methodology used for the calculation is that of the geometrical middle point of the extreme latitudes and longitudes of Europe, so the stone was located at 48°30′N 23°23′E / 48.500°N 23.383°E. However, the actual location of the monument seems rather 47°57′46.47″N 24°11′14.4″E / 47.9629083°N 24.187333°E and not the coordinates to which they relate. This is near the village of Dilove located on the Tisza river, close to the Romanian border, in the county of Rakhiv in the Transcarpathian region.
Soviet measurements
Measurements done after World War II by Soviet scientists reconfirmed the Austria-Hungarian claim that Rakhiv and Dilove (in Russian: Rakhov and Dyelovoye) to be the geographical centre of Europe. The old marker in the small town was renewed, and a major campaign to convince everyone of its validity was undertaken.[citation needed]
Tillenberg/Dyleň, modern day Czechia/Bavaria
Austrian geographers also marked the 939-metre-high Tillenberg (Dyleň) near the Bohemian city of Eger/Cheb with a copper plate as the centre of Europe. As the border to Germany/Bavaria runs 100 m west of the mountaintop, the German village of Neualbenreuth uses this for promotional purposes. Bayerischer Rundfunk journalists asked the Institut für Geographie of the University of Munich to verify the claims. The institute concluded that the centre lies further to the south, in Hildweinsreuth near Flossenbürg.
After a re-estimation of the boundaries of the continent of Europe in 1989, Jean-George Affholder, a scientist at the Institut Géographique National (French National Geographic Institute) determined that the geographic centre of Europe is located at 54°54′N 25°19′E / 54.900°N 25.317°E.[10] The method used for calculating this point was that of the centre of gravity of the geometrical figure of Europe. This point is located in Lithuania, near the village of Girija. A monument, composed by the sculptor Gediminas Jokūbonis and consisting of a column of white granite surmounted by a crown of stars, was erected at the location in 2004. An area of woods and fields surrounding the geographic centre point and including Lake Girija, Bernotai Hill, and an old burial ground, was set aside as a reserve in 1992. The State Tourism Department at the Ministry of Economy of Lithuania has classified the Geographic Centre monument and its reserve as a tourist attraction. 17 km away lies Europos Parkas, Open Air Museum of the Centre of Europe, a sculpture park containing the world's largest sculpture made of TV sets.[11]
It is the only Geographical Centre of Europe with recognition in the Guinness Book of World Records.[12]
It is claimed that a 1992 survey found that the geometric centre of Europe is in the village of Tállya, Hungary 48°14′10″N 21°13′33″E / 48.23610°N 21.22574°E.[13][14] In 2000, a sculpture was erected in the village, with a table on it declaring the place the "Geometric Centre of Europe".[15]
In 2000 Belarusian scientists Alexey Solomonov and Valery Anoshko published a report that stated the geographic centre of Europe was located near Lake Sho (55°10′55″N 28°15′30″E / 55.18194°N 28.25833°E; Template:Lang-be) in Vitsebsk Voblast.[16]
The scientists used a special computer program that takes Europe in a single entity – the White Sea and the Baltic Sea, Britain and Ireland were included in the program as continental zone objects. It is assumed that in the calculations to determine the center of Europe, one must take into account the inland waters of Europe and the Ural Mountains, the eastern border of Europe.
Russian confirmation
Scientists from the Russian Central Research Institute of Geodesy, Aerial Survey and Cartography (Template:Lang-ru) confirmed the calculations of Belarusian geodesists that the geographical centre of Europe is located in Polotsk 55°30′0″N 28°48′0″E / 55.50000°N 28.80000°E. A small monument to the Geographical Centre of Europe was set up in Polotsk on May 31, 2008.[17]
It is claimed that if all the islands of Europe – from the Azores to Franz Joseph Land and from Crete to Iceland – are taken into consideration then the centre of Europe lies at 58°18′14″N 22°16′44″E / 58.30389°N 22.27889°E in the village of Mõnnuste, on Saaremaa island in western Estonia. Again, no author and no method of calculation have been disclosed. The local Kärla Parish is seeking to verify the location and to turn it into a tourist location.[18]
Geographic centre of the European Union
The French Institut Géographique National (IGN) has been calculating the changing location of what it estimates to be the geographical centre of the EU since at least 1987. Its calculations exclude such extra-European territories of the EU as French Polynesia. As the European Union (or formerly – European Community) has grown in the last 50 years, the geographical centre has shifted with each expansion.
1987–1995
12 members: In 1987 the centre of the European Community of the 12 members was declared to be in the middle of France, in the village of Saint-André-le-Coq (63310), département of Puy-de-Dôme (63), région of Auvergne.
1990–1995
12 members after the reunification of Germany. In 1990, the centre shifted some 25 km north-eastward, to the place called Noireterre in the village of Saint-Clément (03250), département of Allier (03), the same région of Auvergne. A small monument commemorating the latter discovery still exists in Saint Clément.
1995–2004
15 members: Using the same techniques, the IGN has identified the geographic centre of the 15-member Union (1995–2004) to be in Viroinval, Belgium, at coordinates 50°00′33″N 4°39′59″E / 50.00917°N 4.66639°E, and a monument there records that finding.
2004–2007
25 members: The 25-member Union (2004–2007), had a centre calculated by the IGN to be situated at 50°31′31″N 7°35′50″E / 50.52528°N 7.59722°E, in the village of Kleinmaischeid, Rhineland-Palatinate, Germany.
2007–2013
27 members: On January 1, 2007, with the inclusion of Romania and Bulgaria in the European Union, the geographic centre of the European Union changed to a wheat field outside of the German town Gelnhausen, in the state of Hesse, 115 km east of the previous marker, at 50°10′21″N 9°9′0″E / 50.17250°N 9.15000°E.[19]
2013–2020
28 members: On July 1, 2013, with the accession of Croatia, the geographic centre entered North-West Bavaria in the place Westerngrund at the river Schulzengrundbach at 50°7′2.23″N 9°14′51.97″E / 50.1172861°N 9.2477694°E. When the French overseas department Mayotte (Indian Ocean island group between Southeast African mainland and Madagascar) joined the EU on 10 May 2014 (as part of France), the geographic center shifted by 500 m to 50°6′8.004″N 9°15′15.91″E / 50.10222333°N 9.2544194°E, still at Westerngrund, beside a path.[20] It is 40 km east of Frankfurt, Germany, which is headquarters to the European Central Bank.
2020-present
27 members: On 31 January, 2020, with the withdrawal of the United Kingdom from the EU, the geographical mid-point moved to Gadheim near Würzburg.[citation needed]
Other calculations
The geographical midpoint of the European Union is not free from disputes, either. If some different extreme points of the European Union, like some Atlantic Ocean islands, are taken into consideration this point is calculated in different locations.[citation needed]
Eurozone
The original centre of the Eurozone is located in France. This location has changed with the accession of new countries into the Eurozone (e.g. Slovakia 2009).[citation needed]
See also
- Central Europe
- Centroid
- Intermediate Region
- Geography of Europe
- Extreme points of the European Union
- Geographical centre of Earth
References
- ^ a b "Suchowola commune (Poland)".
In 1775 royal astronomer Szymon Antoni Sobiekrajski published a report in which he stated that Suchowola is the exact geographic centre of Europe
- ^ "SVK: Kremnické Bane – Geographical Center Of Europe". en.infoglobe.cz.
- ^ "Geographical Centre of Europe: Monument in Rakhiv". Lonely Planet.
- ^ "The Museum of Geographical Centre of Europe". Museums of Lithuania.
- ^ http://confluence.org/confluence.php?visitid=14714 : "according to the research of the French National Geographic Institute, the one and only geographical central point of the continent is in Lithuania, a fact that even won recognition in the Guinness Book of World Records"
- ^ Tapon, Francis (2011). The Hidden Europe: What Eastern Europeans Can Teach Us. SonicTrek. p. 14. ISBN 978-0-9765812-2-2.
- ^ Viktor Korbut (2009). "How to reach the centre of Europe". Belarus Magazine. No. 5. Archived from the original on 2013-09-21. Retrieved 2013-09-21.
- ^ "Tállya". www.tortenelmi-borut.hu. Archived from the original on 2013-09-25. Retrieved 2013-09-13.
According to topographical measurements, Tállya is the geodesic centre of [...] continental Europe
- ^ "Geographical centre of Europe". Retrieved 27 July 2018.
- ^ Jan S. Krogh. "Other Places of Interest: Central Europe".
- ^ "Europos Parkas: Open Air Museum of the Centre of Europe". EU PHARE 2001 Co-operation in the Baltic Sea Region Programme.
- ^ "The geographical Centre of Europe". visitlithuania.net. Retrieved 4 November 2019.
- ^ "Tállya Online: Európa Mértani Közepe, Tállya". Archived from the original on 2008-05-13. Retrieved 2008-07-01.
- ^ Cristea, George (2001). Jakten på Europas mittpunkt (in Swedish). Stockholm: Carlsson. ISBN 91-7203-435-1.
- ^ "Tállya nevezetességei – Közterületi szobrok – Európa mértani középpontja (DSCF6249)" [Sights of Tállya – Public Sculptures – The Geometric Center of Europe (DSCF6249)] (in Hungarian). Archived from the original on 2009-11-18. Retrieved 2008-07-01.
- ^ Igor Anisimov (2007). "Letters stamped "From the center of Europe"". No. 5. Belarus Magazine. Archived from the original on 2012-02-07.
{{cite magazine}}
: Cite magazine requires|magazine=
(help) - ^ Российские геодезисты подтвердили нахождение центра Европы в Полоцке - Главные новости - БЕЛТА - новости, события, факты, комментарии[dead link ]
- ^ "Kärla vald tahab Euroopa keskpunkti külalistele avada" (in Estonian). Archived from the original on 2011-05-26. Retrieved 2008-11-29.
- ^ Frey, George (2007-01-05). "5 January 2007". Signonsandiego.com. Archived from the original on 2012-09-11. Retrieved 2011-01-03.
- ^ "OpenStreetMap".
Further reading
- Gardner, N (November 2005). "Pivotal points: defining Europe's centre". Hidden Europe (5): 20–21. Retrieved 2007-01-11. Useful short English language article that considers the claims of various localities to be the geographical centre of Europe.
A film about the "Center of Europe"
A 2004 Polish-German documentary, Środek Europy (Die Mitte, "The Center"), written and directed by Stanisław Mucha, shows over a dozen different locations.[1]
- ^ "The Center (Die Mitte)". strandfilm.