Arrondissement of Saint-Amand-Montrond

The arrondissement of Saint-Amand-Montrond is an arrondissement of France in the Cher department in the Centre-Val de Loire region. It has 116 communes.[1] Its population is 63,938 (2016), and its area is 2,683.7 km2 (1,036.2 sq mi).[2]

Saint-Amand-Montrond
Location within the region Centre-Val de Loire
CountryFrance
RegionCentre-Val de Loire
DepartmentCher
No. of communes116
SubprefectureSaint-Amand-Montrond
Area
  Total2,683.7 km2 (1,036.2 sq mi)
Population
 (2016)
  Total63,938
  Density24/km2 (60/sq mi)
INSEE code182

Composition

The communes of the arrondissement of Saint-Amand-Montrond, and their INSEE codes, are:[1]

  1. Ainay-le-Vieil (18002)
  2. Apremont-sur-Allier (18007)
  3. Arcomps (18009)
  4. Ardenais (18010)
  5. Arpheuilles (18013)
  6. Augy-sur-Aubois (18017)
  7. Bannegon (18021)
  8. Beddes (18024)
  9. Bessais-le-Fromental (18029)
  10. Blet (18031)
  11. Bouzais (18034)
  12. Bruère-Allichamps (18038)
  13. Bussy (18040)
  14. La Celette (18041)
  15. La Celle (18042)
  16. La Celle-Condé (18043)
  17. Chalivoy-Milon (18045)
  18. Chambon (18046)
  19. La Chapelle-Hugon (18048)
  20. Charenton-du-Cher (18052)
  21. Charly (18054)
  22. Châteaumeillant (18057)
  23. Châteauneuf-sur-Cher (18058)
  24. Le Châtelet (18059)
  25. Chaumont (18060)
  26. Le Chautay (18062)
  27. Chavannes (18063)
  28. Chezal-Benoît (18065)
  29. Cogny (18068)
  30. Colombiers (18069)
  31. Contres (18071)
  32. Cornusse (18072)
  33. Corquoy (18073)
  34. Cours-les-Barres (18075)
  35. Coust (18076)
  36. Crézançay-sur-Cher (18078)
  37. Croisy (18080)
  38. Cuffy (18082)
  39. Culan (18083)
  40. Drevant (18086)
  41. Dun-sur-Auron (18087)
  42. Épineuil-le-Fleuriel (18089)
  43. Farges-Allichamps (18091)
  44. Faverdines (18093)
  45. Flavigny (18095)
  46. Germigny-l'Exempt (18101)
  47. Givardon (18102)
  48. Grossouvre (18106)
  49. La Groutte (18107)
  50. La Guerche-sur-l'Aubois (18108)
  51. Ids-Saint-Roch (18112)
  52. Ignol (18113)
  53. Ineuil (18114)
  54. Jouet-sur-l'Aubois (18118)
  55. Lantan (18121)
  56. Lignières (18127)
  57. Loye-sur-Arnon (18130)
  58. Lugny-Bourbonnais (18131)
  59. Maisonnais (18135)
  60. Marçais (18136)
  61. Meillant (18142)
  62. Menetou-Couture (18143)
  63. Montlouis (18152)
  64. Morlac (18153)
  65. Mornay-Berry (18154)
  66. Mornay-sur-Allier (18155)
  67. Nérondes (18160)
  68. Neuilly-en-Dun (18161)
  69. Neuvy-le-Barrois (18164)
  70. Nozières, Cher (18169)
  71. Orcenais (18171)
  72. Orval (18172)
  73. Osmery (18173)
  74. Ourouer-les-Bourdelins (18175)
  75. Parnay (18177)
  76. La Perche (18178)
  77. Le Pondy (18183)
  78. Préveranges (18187)
  79. Raymond (18191)
  80. Reigny (18192)
  81. Rezay (18193)
  82. Sagonne (18195)
  83. Saint-Aignan-des-Noyers (18196)
  84. Saint-Amand-Montrond (18197)
  85. Saint-Baudel (18199)
  86. Saint-Christophe-le-Chaudry (18203)
  87. Saint-Denis-de-Palin (18204)
  88. Saint-Georges-de-Poisieux (18209)
  89. Saint-Germain-des-Bois, Cher (18212)
  90. Saint-Hilaire-de-Gondilly (18215)
  91. Saint-Hilaire-en-Lignières (18216)
  92. Saint-Jeanvrin (18217)
  93. Saint-Loup-des-Chaumes (18221)
  94. Saint-Maur (18225)
  95. Saint-Pierre-les-Bois (18230)
  96. Saint-Pierre-les-Étieux (18231)
  97. Saint-Priest-la-Marche (18232)
  98. Saint-Saturnin (18234)
  99. Saint-Symphorien (18236)
  100. Saint-Vitte (18238)
  101. Sancoins (18242)
  102. Saulzais-le-Potier (18245)
  103. Serruelles (18250)
  104. Sidiailles (18252)
  105. Tendron (18260)
  106. Thaumiers (18261)
  107. Torteron (18265)
  108. Touchay (18266)
  109. Uzay-le-Venon (18268)
  110. Vallenay (18270)
  111. Venesmes (18273)
  112. Vereaux (18275)
  113. Vernais (18276)
  114. Verneuil (18277)
  115. Vesdun (18278)
  116. Villecelin (18283)

History

The arrondissement of Saint-Amand-Montrond was created in 1800.[3]

As a result of the reorganisation of the cantons of France which came into effect in 2015, the borders of the cantons are no longer related to the borders of the arrondissements. The cantons of the arrondissement of Saint-Amand-Montrond were, as of January 2015:[4]

gollark: Anyway, if you still use embodied employees, that might explain why UCorp™ is so behind.
gollark: The measures are of course autooptimized too.
gollark: Our cluster management systems just automatically select for productivity.
gollark: See, wage growth cost us capital which could otherwise be fed to our capital generators, so we just use orbital mind control laser backscatter to nondestructively extract neural patterns from arbitrary people, then execute them in parallel at a few thousand times real time speed on our computing clusters.
gollark: We have employees, we don't really *worry* about them.

References

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