Cianjur, Cianjur Regency

Cianjur
Other transcription(s)
  Chinese 展玉

Main road in Cianjur
Motto: Sugih Mukti
Cianjur

Location of Cianjur in Indonesia

Coordinates: 6°48′42″S 107°8′43″E / 6.81167°S 107.14528°E / -6.81167; 107.14528Coordinates: 6°48′42″S 107°8′43″E / 6.81167°S 107.14528°E / -6.81167; 107.14528
Country Indonesia
Province West Java
Government
  Regent Irvan Revano Muchtar
Population (2010)
  Total 158,125
Time zone WIB (UTC+7)
A logement (inn) in Cianjur in the early 1900s
Cianjur Regency in West Java between Sukabumi Regency and West Bandung Regency.

Cianjur (Chinese: 展玉; pinyin: Zhǎn yù) is a town and district in the West Java province of Indonesia, and is the capital of Cianjur Regency. The town of Cianjur is located along one of the main roads between Jakarta (120 km to the northwest) and Bandung (60 km to the east). The population was 158,125 at the 2010 Census.[1] Because of its location, some of Cianjur's residents commute to work either in Bandung or in Jakarta.

The road on which Cianjur is located used to be the main (extremely busy) road from Jakarta to Bandung but was in effect replaced as the main road link between these two main cities when the Jakarta-Bandung tollroad was fully completed in 2005.

Cianjur was founded in 1677, with the first head of the town being R. A. Wiratanudatar I, entitled Dalem Cikundul, as the descendant from the old Sundanese kingdom of Pajajaran.

The district mainly produces agricultural products, especially rice, and it has been known as the major source of rice production for the heavily populated Java island besides Karawang.

More than 75 people were killed in the earthquake of 2 September 2009.

Transportation

After being dormant for about 2 years, the train called Siliwangi between Sukabumi and Cianjur was reactivated on 8 February 2014. It is faster than the buses which are usually trapped in traffic jams, but the cost of a train ticket is double that of using buses.[2]

Policies

By 2007 the city government asked female municipal employees to wear jilbab (hijab). It also placed road signs encouraging women to wear jilbab.[3]

References

  1. Biro Pusat Statistik, Jakarta, 2011.
  2. "Humas: Tarif KA Cianjur-Sukabumi Masih Bisa Dikoreksi". 8 February 2014.
  3. Warburton, Eve (January–March 2007). "No longer a choice" (89 ed.). Inside Indonesia. Retrieved 2017-06-20.


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