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The centre of the Euroverse will shift to this tiny German village, population 89, thanks to Brexit

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A sign identifies the village of Gadheim near Wuerzburg, Germany. Gadheim's 89 inhabitants will find themselves at the geographic centre of the post-Brexit EU, according to the IGN geographic institute in Paris. Photo: AFP
Agence France-Presse

A European Union flag snapping in the wind in the tiny German village of Gadheim is the only hint at why the world’s media are beating a path to this out-of-the-way spot.

Its handful of houses are set in the rolling hills of Bavaria’s wine country, clustered around a solitary road wending through fields overlooked by a clutch of wind turbines.

When Britain’s two-year negotiations on leaving the EU end in 2019, Gadheim’s 89 inhabitants will find themselves at the geographic centre of the bloc, according to the IGN geographic institute in Paris.

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Most here first heard the news on the radio, says Juergen Goetz, mayor of nearby Veitshoechheim - Gadheim being too small to have a Buergermeister (mayor) of its own.

“We thought it was an April Fool’s joke at first,” Goetz laughs, as he recounts the story around a table in the village hotel.

There’s no doubt that locals are proud to see their countryside in focus, with its vineyards, endless fields and the winding Main river.

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