Palopo

Palopo or Kota Palopo is one of the autonomous cities (municipalities) in South Sulawesi Province of Indonesia, and the second-largest city in the province. Until it acquired its autonomy, Palopo was the capital of Luwu Regency. The population of the city was 148,033 at the 2010 Census.[1]

Palopo
Seal
Motto(s): 
IDAMAN (Indah (Beautiful), Damai (Safe), Nyaman (Pleasant))
Palopo
Location in Sulawesi and Indonesia
Palopo
Palopo (Indonesia)
Coordinates: 3°0′S 120°12′E
Country Indonesia
Province South Sulawesi
Foundedc. 1620
City Status14 July 2002
Government
  MayorJudas Amir
  Vice MayorRahmat Masri Bandaso
Area
  Total247.52 km2 (95.57 sq mi)
Population
 (2010 Census)
  Total148,033
  Density600/km2 (1,500/sq mi)
Time zoneUTC+8 (Indonesia Central Time)
Area code(+62) 471
Websitepalopokota.go.id

History

Palopo was founded c. 1620, probably under the second Muslim ruler of Luwu Kingdom, Sultan Abdullah Muhiddin, who is buried at Malangke, the former palace centre of Luwu. His momental grave, which was carved with Majapahit-style floral decorations, was destroyed by Kahar Muzakkar rebels in the 1950s: nothing today remains except the location.[2] The advantage of Palopo over the former palace centre was the potential for trade with the Toraja-speaking Seko-Rongkong valleys. The town sits at the foot of a steep, winding pass which leads into the highland regions. In the late 19th century this trade consisted primarily of coffee and slaves.[3] Gold panned from upland rivers may also have been an attraction. Dammar was an important export in the later period.[4]

Little is known of Palopo before the Dutch annexation of South Sulawesi in 1905. The only Western visitor to have left an account of the town was James Brooke (later Rajah of Sarawak), who described it in the 1830s as 'a miserable town, consisting of about 300 houses, scattered and dilapidated'.[5] It is the location of South Sulawesi's oldest mosque. Built from blocks of white coral, with a three-tiered roof representing the ancient Austronesian cosmos, the Mesjid Jami' is said to have been built during the reign of Sultan Abdullah. It has a 19th-century dedicatory inscription behind one of its doors, presumably reflecting a restoration. The royal graveyard lies to the north at Lokkoe and contains pyramidical stone mausolea in which lie the remains of Luwu's 17th to 20th-century rulers.

Administration

Palopo City is divided into nine Districts (Kecamatan), tabulated below with their 2010 Census population.[6]

NamePopulation
Census 2010
Wara Selatan
(South Wara)
10,124
Sandana5,732
Wara31,024
Wara Timur
(East Wara)
30,997
Mungkajang6,981
Wara Utara
(North Wara)
19,011
Bara22,959
Telluwanua11,701
Wara Barat
(West Wara)
9,403
gollark: It's wireless.
gollark: Just duct tape half your 64GB RAM kit to the GPU.
gollark: Look, just ask for advice on r/buildapc, the cool subreddit, or duct tape bigger RAM chips to the 1660 Ti.
gollark: …
gollark: Anyway, it's not minor improvements; maybe 10% IPC improvements and possibly 10% or so clock improvements from the 7nm process, plus lower power.

References

  1. Biro Pusat Statistik, Jakarta, 2011.
  2. Van Lijf, J.M. 1953. 'Korte mededelingen.' Bijdragen tot de Taal-, Land- en Volkenkunde 109:379-81.
  3. Braam Morris, D.F. van. 1889. 'Het landschap Loewoe.' Tijdschrift voor Indische Taal-, Land- en Volkenkunde 32: 497-555; Zerner, C. 1981. 'Signs of the spirits, signature of the smith: Iron forging in Tana Toraja.' Indonesia 31: 89-112
  4. Caldwell, I. 1994. ‘Report on fieldwork.' Baruga 10:16-18.
  5. Brooke, J. 1848. Narrative of events in Borneo and Celebes down to the occupation of Labuan. From the Journals of James Brooke, Esq. Rajah of Sarawak and Governor of Labuan [. . .] by Captain Rodney Mundy. London: John Murray
  6. Biro Pusat Statistik, Jakarta, 2011.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.