Subdistricts of West Sulawesi

The province of the West Sulawesi in Indonesia is divided into regencies which is turn are divided administratively into subdistricts, known as Kecamatan.

The subdistricts of West Sulawesi with the regency it falls into are as follows:


  • Allu, Polewali Mandar
  • Anreapi, Polewali Mandar
  • Aralle, Mamasa
  • Balanipa, Polewali Mandar
  • Bambalamotu, Mamuju Utara
  • Banggae, Majene
  • Baras, Mamuju Utara
  • Binuang, Polewali Mandar
  • Bonehau, Mamuju
  • Budong-Budong, Mamuju
  • Campalagian, Polewali Mandar
  • Kalukku, Mamuju
  • Kalumpang, Mamuju
  • Karossa, Mamuju
  • Limboro, Polewali Mandar
  • Luyo, Polewali Mandar
  • Malunda, Majene
  • Mamasa, Mamasa
  • Mambi, Mamasa
  • Mamuju, Mamuju
  • Mapilli, Polewali Mandar
  • Matakali, Polewali Mandar
  • Matangnga, Polewali Mandar
  • Messawa, Mamasa
  • Nosu, Mamasa
  • Pamboang, Majene
  • Pana, Mamasa
  • Pangale, Mamuju
  • Papalang, Mamuju
  • Pasangkayu, Mamuju Utara
  • Polewali, Polewali Mandar
  • Sampaga, Mamuju
  • Sarudu, Mamuju Utara
  • Sendana, Majene
  • Sesena Padang, Mamasa
  • Simboro dan Kepulauan, Mamuju
  • Sumarorong, Mamasa
  • Tabang, Mamasa
  • Tabulahan, Mamasa
  • Tapalang Barat, Mamuju
  • Tapalang, Mamuju
  • Tapango, Polewali Mandar
  • Tinambung, Polewali Mandar
  • Tobadak, Mamuju
  • Tommo, Mamuju
  • Topoyo, Mamuju
  • Tutallu, Polewali Mandar
  • Wonomulyo, Polewali Mandar
Subdistricts of Indonesia by province
Kecamatan
  • Aceh
  • Bali
  • Bangka–Belitung Islands
  • Banten
  • Central Java
  • Central Kalimantan
  • Central Sulawesi
  • East Java
  • East Kalimantan
  • East Nusa Tenggara
  • Gorontalo
  • Jakarta
  • Jambi
  • Lampung
  • Maluku
  • North Maluku
  • North Sulawesi
  • North Sumatra
  • Papua
  • Riau
  • Riau Islands
  • South East Sulawesi
  • South Kalimantan
  • South Sulawesi
  • South Sumatra
  • West Java
  • West Kalimantan
  • West Nusa Tenggara
  • West Papua
  • West Sulawesi
  • West Sumatra

Famous quotes containing the word west:

    The very nursery tales of this generation were the nursery tales of primeval races. They migrate from east to west, and again from west to east; now expanded into the “tale divine” of bards, now shrunk into a popular rhyme.
    Henry David Thoreau (1817–1862)