Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Tasikmalaya is a major religious centre for West Java. The regency is known as the city of Muslim students (kota santri), [5] with more than 800 traditional Islamic boarding schools . [6] Tasikmalaya is known for handicrafts (Indonesian: kerajinan anyaman) and salak (zalacca).
Tasikmalaya city is divided into ten districts (kecamatan), listed below with their areas and their populations at the 2010 census [3] and the 2020 census, [4] together with the official estimates as at mid 2023. [1] The table also includes the number of administrative villages (all classed as urban kelurahan) in each district, and its post code.
Singaparna is a district which serves as the regency seat of Tasikmalaya Regency in West Java, Indonesia. it is located about 10 kms west of Tasikmalaya city. The total area of Singaparna district is around 2,011 hectares, [1] which is divided into 10 administrative villages (desa). Most of the land in Singaparna is used for agriculture and ...
Provinces (provinsi or daerah istimewa) (GDP; GDP per capita; HDI; poverty rate); Island population) Level 2; Regencies (kabupaten) Cities (kota) Metropolitan (metropolitan) (full list; cities by GDP; regencies by GDP; cities by population; regencies by population) Level 3; Districts (kecamatan, distrik, kapanewon, or kemantren) Level 4; Rural ...
Regencies (kabupaten) and cities (kota) are the second-level administrative subdivision in Indonesia, immediately below the provinces, and above the districts.Regencies are roughly equivalent to American counties, although most cities in the United States are below the counties. [1]
Provinces are made up of regencies (kabupaten) and cities (kota). Provinces, regencies, and cities have their own local governments and parliamentary bodies. Since the enactment of Law Number 22 of 1999 on Local Government [ 1 ] (the law was revised by Law Number 32 of 2004, Law Number 23 of 2014, and the 2023 Omnibus Law on Job Creation ), [ 2 ...
The local district term kecamatan is used in the majority of Indonesian areas, with camat being the head. During the Dutch East Indies and early republic period, the term district referred to kewedanan, a subdivision of a regency. Kewedanan itself was divided into kecamatan, which was translated as subdistrict (Dutch: onderdistrict). [7]
Ciawi is a town and an administrative district (Indonesian: kecamatan) in the Bogor Regency, West Java, Indonesia - not to be confused with the similarly named Ciawi District in Tasikmalaya Regency - and is named for the Awi River (the prefix "Ci" mean "river").