8 Secrets Hidden Inside the Leaning Tower of Pisa

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  • čas přidán 28. 09. 2021
  • The Leaning Tower Of Pisa isn't Italian just because it was built in Italy. It's Italian through and through. Its History, its Construction, its faults and its beauty are all, just so very Italian!
    1. Showing off
    The Tower was designed to be a free-standing bell tower for the cathedral in the walled-in complex called Piazza Dei Miracoli or Miracle Square. The reason for its creation was because Pisa was becoming a powerful and prosperous city and they wanted to show off their wealth by constructing grand buildings, they also needed a place to display all the treasure and works of art they had pillaged from Sicily.
    2. Unsound Foundation
    The soil under the tower is a mixture of sandy and clayey silts, this material is very unstable, and considering the height of the water table and the height and weight of the tower, the foundations should have been made a lot deeper than the 3 meters they were, However, these weak, spongey foundations have actually saved the tower from falling in at least 4 occasions. Since the middle ages, there have been 4 severe earthquakes that, had the ground beneath the tower been harder would have shaken the tower to pieces but the softer soil under the tower actually absorbs the vibrations ensuring that the tower doesn't resonate with the earthquake.
    3. Tranquillo.
    Construction of the first stage was started in 1173 but then postponed for 60 years because of ongoing conflicts with Florence, Genoa, and Lucca. Construction of the second part started again in 1233 and continued to stop and start again until 1284 when the Pisans were defeated by the Genoese. In 1319, the seventh and final floor was completed but it wasn't until 1372, 199 years after construction had started the bell tower was added and the tower was finally completed.
    4. 7 Floors of Flaws.
    The Tower of Pisa actually began to lean shortly after construction of the second floor started, and construction was stopped after the third floor was completed. After the 100 year break, they attempted to build more floors and correct the leaning problem by building one side slightly higher than the other, however, this only added more masonry and weight to the weakest side of the foundations causing the Tower to lean more! So now the tower was not only still leaning but it was also bent too.
    5. Digging yourself into a hole.
    In 1838, an Architect called Alessandro Della Gherardesca wanted to uncover the beautiful stonework at the base of the tower that, under the tower's 14,500 tonnes, had been pushed under ground-level. He decided to dig a trench all the way around the base of the tower, making the stonework visible once again, but this trench became flooded with water and that water, and the removal of soil from around the tower's base only caused its inclination to increase.
    6. The bell tolls for whom?
    The bell-chamber at the top of the tower is home to seven bells, one for each note from the major scale. The biggest bell and the last one to be installed is called L'Assunta and was cast in 1654 and weighs nearly 8000lbs (3620kg). The bells haven't been rung since the last century for fear that their motion and vibration could cause damage to the tower.
    7. Pride.
    The Italian Dictator, Mussolini, thought that this leaning and bent tower with all its mistakes wasn't good publicity for Italian engineering and craftsmanship and so he decided to correct it. He had engineers drill 361 holes into the masonry foundation on the weaker side and fill them with concrete. Ironically, this just made the weaker side of the foundation heavier and therefore the tower tilted even more!
    8. Stabilizing the Tower.
    By 1996 the tower was perilously close to toppling over so engineers from all over the world were called in to work out how to stop it. They decided that rather than try to correct or strengthen the weakest side like every other failed attempt before them, they'd do the complete opposite, they'd weaken the stronger side. First, they put 800 tonnes of lead counterweights on the stronger side of the tower, then they attached cables around the third storey and tensioned them, then they bored through two layers of soil and extracted the soil from the boreholes the idea being to create cavities for the clay to compact down into smoothly once the bore was extracted from the hole. they removed a total of 1342 cubic ft (38m3) of soil and reduced the lean by 20 inches (50cm).
    It's a bell Tower that tolls no bell, and yet all those faults, all those errors, mistakes, and flukes that went into it, have given it something that almost every other building lacks, they've given it a personality, a soul, and that, is what makes it truly Italian!
    Please let us know what you thought of this video in the comments below and if you enjoyed it please give us a like and subscribe for more!
    See more at www.brilliantnews.com
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Komentáře • 25

  • @tommysanders7604
    @tommysanders7604 Před 2 lety +1

    Absolutely STUNNING and Amazing ❤

  • @aneesakhan037
    @aneesakhan037 Před rokem +1

    Nice

  • @COMMANDER-ONE
    @COMMANDER-ONE Před 2 lety +2

    Seven bells for each of the notes on the major scale? So they’re missing a bell also?

  • @cosettapessa6417
    @cosettapessa6417 Před 2 lety +3

    Nice video! I don’t know how you could mispronounce every word lol😅

  • @Galatasaray9277
    @Galatasaray9277 Před 19 dny

    Buraya herkes gitmeli çünkü yıkılacakmış bende görerek tarihe geçtim

  • @Kanuchki
    @Kanuchki Před rokem +1

    We should call it leaning square

  • @markharris1223
    @markharris1223 Před 7 měsíci +1

    Leaning Tower of Pizza? Where's the cheese?

  • @RedGermRedGerm
    @RedGermRedGerm Před rokem +2

    Bells still ring…just don’t swing.

    • @patrickdoak7813
      @patrickdoak7813 Před 2 měsíci

      Exactly and all electric now. I was there when they went off at noon one day. Quite an experience.

  • @ElectrickSoundz
    @ElectrickSoundz Před rokem +1

    Educating self educating from home still free to travel and do anything on the planet

  • @boristheactionwolf8275

    How did it tilt when it was build

  • @iambhargab770
    @iambhargab770 Před rokem +2

    The Ratneshwar temple near Manikarnika Ghat located in Varanasi, Uttar Pradesh, India, leans by 9 degrees, which is 5 degrees more than the leaning tower of Pisa.

  • @guillermoflores8024
    @guillermoflores8024 Před 2 lety

    One burned above saharas gravitational pull for stance ....other didnt.....point of balance........................heads up if ur into that....cac

  • @jari2018
    @jari2018 Před 2 lety

    Shouldnt it be Piasan really - what if Spain conquered pisa -would it be spanish ? All south america are spansh witht he same logic and al usa native cultural are .. the history of the conqureers ?

  • @mr.hardin0185
    @mr.hardin0185 Před 2 lety

    111111😁😁

  • @debbiecooper3661
    @debbiecooper3661 Před 2 lety

    Looks tartaria

  • @anjelojustinebartonico3629

    First yay

  • @ElectrickSoundz
    @ElectrickSoundz Před rokem

    18.99 a family plan on CZcams university and Boost Mobile USA 5g huweiw or not

  • @earthroblox4738
    @earthroblox4738 Před 2 lety +1

    I don't really understand this video lol.

  • @danielvillanova2552
    @danielvillanova2552 Před 2 lety

    Bro stop embarrassing stuff! You're literally going to embarrasse a world landmark and it will be all your fault!