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Tejakula, Buleleng

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Tejakula
Location of Tejakula district within Buleleng
Location of Tejakula district within Buleleng
Map
Country Indonesia
ProvinceBali
RegencyBuleleng
Villages/Sub-districts10 villages
Area
 • Total97.69 km2 (37.72 sq mi)
Population
 (2016)
 • Total54,110
 • Density550/km2 (1,400/sq mi)
Demographics
 • Ethnic groupsBali Aga
Balinese
 • ReligionHinduism (Balinese Hinduism • folk Hinduism)
 • Languages
Time zoneIndonesia Central Time
Bathing place, between 1910 and 1921

Tejakula is a village (desa) and a district (kecamatan) in Buleleng regency, northern Bali, Indonesia. It stands on the north-eastern coast of the island.[1] Tejakula is majority inhabited by the Bali Aga people native people of the island of Bali.

Villages

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Tejakula district has 10 administrative villages:[2]

  • Bondalem
  • Julah
  • Les
  • Madenan
  • Pacung
  • Penuktukan
  • Sambirenteng
  • Sambiran
  • Tejakula (desa Tejakula)
  • Tembok

Along the coastal road from north to south are Bangkah, Pacung, Julah, Bondalem, Desa Tejakula, Les (half-mile south of the road), Penuktukan, Sambirenteng and Tembok. Sambiran is 2 km south of Pacung and Madenan is 7 km south-west of desa Tejakula.[3]

Les

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Les has an area of 769 hectares ; its coastal area spans 135 hectares and its beach is 2 km long. It used to have narural coral reefs and those have been destroyed by unsustainable fishing with explosives (and poison). This, and the subsequent disappearance of sea life, has negatively impacted traditional fishing and coral harvesting. After the evaluation of 19 sites, in 2019 one was chosen to instal spider frame modules at depths of 6 and 10 meters on the seabed and 88 coral fragments of Acropora loripes implanted on them.[4]

Sambiran

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Sambiran traditionnally produces hand-woven cotton cloths, used as traditional festive clothing.[5]

References

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  1. ^ "Tejakula, map". google.com/maps. Retrieved 2024-05-26.
  2. ^ "List of places in Tejakula district, Buleleng regency". m.nomor.net. Retrieved 2024-06-06.
  3. ^ "Tejakula and surrondings, map". openstreetmap.org.
  4. ^ Subhan, Muhammad Ali; Yahya, Yamen; Assuyuti, Yayan Mardiansyah; Putri, Lily Surayya Eka (May 2021). "The growth of Acropora loripes (Brook 1892) using spider frame module transplantation method and its effect on the presence of fish reef in Les Village, Buleleng, Bali". IOP Conference Series: Earth and Environmental Science. 744 (1): 012080. Bibcode:2021E&ES..744a2080S. doi:10.1088/1755-1315/744/1/012080. Retrieved 2024-05-26.
  5. ^ Nabholz-Kartaschoff, Marie-Louise (January 2008). "The Textiles of Sembiran". In Nabholz-Kartaschoff, Marie-Louise; Ardika, I Wayan (eds.). Burials, Texts and Rituals: Ethnoarchaeological investigations in North Bali, Indonesia (Göttinger Studien zur Ethnologie 1). pp. 69–117. ISBN 9783940344120. OCLC 808384704.