Kintamani, Bali

Place in Bali, Indonesia From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Kintamani, Bali

Kintamani (Balinese: ᬓᬶᬦ᭄ᬢᬫᬦᬶ, Kintámani) is a district (kecamatan), and a village within that district, on the western edge of the larger caldera wall of the Mount Batur (Gunung Batur) caldera in Bali, Indonesia. It is on the same north–south road as Penelokan and has been used as a stopping place to view the Mount Batur region. Kintamani is also known for Pura Tuluk Biyu's 1,000-year-old "Rites of Peace" stone tablets and the Kintamani dog breed.[1] It is situated next to Mount Batur.[2][3] Kintamani many inhabited by native Balinese people, Bali Aga.

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Kintamani dog around Mount Batur in Kintamani
Quick Facts ᬓᬶᬦ᭄ᬢᬫᬦᬶ, Country ...
Kintamani
ᬓᬶᬦ᭄ᬢᬫᬦᬶ
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Mount Batur seen from Kintamani
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Location with Bali province
Coordinates: 8°15′29″S 115°19′43″E
CountryIndonesia
ProvinceBali
RegencyBangli
Area
  Total
141.7 sq mi (366.9 km2)
  Density794/sq mi (306.5/km2)
Demographics
  Ethnic groupsBalinese
Bali Aga
  ReligionHinduism (Balinese Hinduism • folk Hinduism)
  Languages
Time zoneIndonesia Central Time
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Kintamani District covers a greater land area than the city of Denpasar at 366.9 km2, and it was home to 112,463 people at the 2020 Census,[4] but the area is rural, with only 7,402 people in 2010 in the administrative village of 19.45 km2 which has grown along the single main road. Altogether there are 48 villages (desa) in the district.

The Kintamani district includes 19 Bali Aga villages, disseminated at the foot of mount Batur, along lake Batur and in the valleys.[5]

See also

References

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