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

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.
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.