16/22 | 8/19/03 3:40 PM | Pisa - The Leaning Tower

Fotographic information
 Pisa, Leaning Tower of, the campanile, freestanding bell tower, of the cathedral of Pisa, 
 Italy. Like the cathedral and associated baptistery, the tower was built in the 
 Romanesque style (see Romanesque Art and Architecture). Adjacent to the three structures 
 is a cemetery, or camposanto (Italian: literally, holy field, originally meant to hold 
 sacred soil from the holy land). The tower is renowned for its marked tilt. This 
 spectacular irregularity has tended to obscure the fact that it is also a magnificent 
 example of Romanesque architecture and decoration. Begun in 1173, the eight-story round 
 tower is 55 m (180 ft) tall and 16 m (52 ft) in diameter at the base. The ground floor is 
 encircled by a blind arcade, or series of walled- in arches. Six additional levels of 
 open galleries, consisting of round arches supported on columns, are surmounted by the 
 bell chamber, somewhat smaller in diameter. Although the tower's ancient bells remain in 
 place, they are no longer rung. The interior of the tower is occupied by a 294-step 
 spiral staircase that leads to the bell chamber. The exterior is adorned with fine 
 multicolored marbles and excellent carved work. The doorway, which is especially ornate, 
 features grotesque carvings of animals. Construction of the campanile stretched over a 
 period of nearly 200 years, partly because of delays caused by the tower's persistent 
 structural problems. By the time the first three stories were completed, one side of the 
 tower had already begun to sink into the soft soil, and construction was halted for 
 nearly 100 years. The first attempts to counter the lean of the structure were made in 
 1275, when construction resumed. By 1301 six stories were complete, and the tower was 
 finished about 1350. At its summit, the structure tilts about 5 m (16 ft) from the 
 vertical, and the lean is said to be increasing at a rate of about 1 mm (about 1/25 of an 
 inch) per year. Italian physicist Galileo conducted his famous experiments with gravity 
 and the relative speed of falling objects from the top story of the tower. The structure 
 has been closed to the 
 public since 1990 due to safety and conservation concerns. 

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