Somba Opu | |
---|---|
Coordinates: 5°12′5″S119°27′15″E / 5.20139°S 119.45417°E | |
Country | Indonesia |
Province | South Sulawesi |
Regency | Gowa Regency |
Government | |
• Camat | Drs. Abdullah Siradjuddin, MSi |
Area | |
• Total | 28.09 km2 (10.85 sq mi) |
Population (mid 2022 estimate) | |
• Total | 160,023 |
• Density | 5,700/km2 (15,000/sq mi) |
Time zone | UTC+8 (Indonesia Central Time) |
Postal Code | 9211x |
Area code | (+62) 411 |
Somba Opu is a district (kecamatan) located in the Gowa Regency, South Sulawesi, Indonesia, and is part of the Greater Makassar area. Somba Opu is one of 18 districts in Gowa Regency. The administrative capital of Gowa Regency, "Sungguminasa", is located in this district and this is the largest regency capital or 2nd largest town in South Sulawesi. A suburb to Makassar, the district is a relatively urbanized area, and can also be called as the city's bedroom community.
Although Somba Opu is not considered as an official town or city, it has a high population density of 5,697 people per km2, and a population of 160,023 in mid 2022, [1] all packed into an area of about 28.09 square kilometres. [2]
The total area is 28.09 km2 or 2,809 Ha (1.49% of the total area of Gowa Regency) with an altitude of 25 metres above sea level. Most of the area is located in the lowlands with geographic coordinates at 5°12'5"S 119°27'15"E. The natural border with the neighbouring district of Pallangga is the Jeneberang River which is a river with a length of 90 km and a river basin area of 881 km2.
Somba Opu is divided into 14 villages
Postalcode | Villages | Area (km2) | Population mid 2021 | Neighborhood |
---|---|---|---|---|
92111 | Sungguminasa | 1.46 | 7,705 | 1. Sungguminasa 2. Lambaselo |
Bonto-bontoa | 1.61 | 13,607 | 1. Bonto-bontoa 2. Bontokamase | |
92112 | Tompobalang | 1.80 | 12,175 | 1. Cambaya 2. Jeneberang |
Tamarunang | 2.16 | 16,915 | 1. Paggentungan 2. Beroanging | |
92113 | Paccinongang | 3.71 | 24,335 | 1. Pao-Pao 2. Paccinongang |
Samata | 1.44 | 9,441 | 1. Samata 2. Borongraukang | |
92114 | Katangka | 1.36 | 9,599 | 1. Lakiyung 2. Katangka |
Tombolo | 2.06 | 16,098 | 1. Pa'bangngiang 2. Tombolo | |
92115 | Pandang-Pandang | 2.16 | 7,264 | 1. Pandang-Pandang 2. Mangasa |
92116 | Kalegowa | 1.21 | 2,840 | 1. Tamalate 2. Hasanuddin |
92117 | Batangkaluku | 1.30 | 14,361 | 1. Karettapa 2. Batangkaluku |
92118 | Romangpolong | 2.71 | 9,299 | 1. Romangpolong 2. Garaganti |
92119 | Bontoramba | 2.12 | 4,683 | 1. Bontobaddo 2. Galoggoro |
Mawang | 2.99 | 5,123 | 1. Buttadidi 2. Biringbalang |
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Fort Somba Opu was a fortified commercial center of the Gowa Sultanate. Its ruins are located in Makassar, South Sulawesi, Indonesia. The fort was the center of the Gowa Sultanate in the 16th-century until its destruction by the Dutch East India Company in 1669. The conquest of Somba Opu citadel was one of the most difficult campaigns the Company had ever undertaken in the East.
The Makassar kingdom of Gowa emerged around 1300 CE as one of many agrarian chiefdoms in the Indonesian peninsula of South Sulawesi. From the sixteenth century onward, Gowa and its coastal ally Talloq became the first powers to dominate most of the peninsula, following wide-ranging administrative and military reforms, including the creation of the first bureaucracy in South Sulawesi. The early history of the kingdom has been analyzed as an example of state formation.
The Kingdom of Tallo was one of the two kingdoms of Makassar in South Sulawesi from the 15th century to 1856. The state stood in a close political relation to the Sultanate of Gowa. After the Islamization of the Gowa and Tallo kingdoms in the early 17th century, they were usually collectively known as the Makassar Kingdom.
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