The current
regent in Jembrana Regency is
I Made Kembang Hartawan, accompanied by the vice regent
I Gede Ngurah Patriana Krisna. They won the
2024 Jembrana regency election, and were inaugurated on February 20, 2025.
Parliament Administrative districts The Regency is divided into five districts (
kecamatan), listed below from west to east with their areas and their populations at the 2010 Census and the 2020 Census, together with the official estimates as at mid 2024. The table also includes the locations of the district administrative centres, the number of
administrative villages in each district (totaling 41 rural
desa and 10 urban
kelurahan), and its postal codes. Notes: (a) including the small offshore islands of
Pulau Buring and
Pulau Kalong. (b) including the
kelurahan of Gilimanuk. (c) comprising 4
kelurahan (Baler Bale Agung, Banjar Tengah, Lelateng and Loloan Barat) and 8
desa. (d) except four villages with different post codes - Baler Bale Agung (postcode of 62212, with 12,110 inhabitants in mid 2023), Banjar Tengah (postcode 62213, with 6,243 inhabitants), Lelateng (postcode 62214, with 10,963 inhabitants) and Loloan Barat (postcode 62215, with 5,056 inhabitants). (e) comprising 4
kelurahan (Dauhwaru, Loloan Timur, Pendem and Sangkaragung) and 6
desa. (f) except the villages of Pendem (62211) and Loloan Timur (62216). (g) including the
kelurahan of Tegal Cangkring. File:Indonesia Jembrana Melaya district location map.svg|Melaya district File:Indonesia Jembrana Negara district location map.svg|Negara district File:Indonesia Jembrana Jembrana district location map.svg|Jembrana district File:Indonesia Jembrana Mendoyo district location map.svg|Mendoyo district File:Indonesia Jembrana Pekutatan district location map.svg|Pekutatan district
Jembrana District The ten villages are Air Kuning, Batu Agung, Buteng, Dangin Tukadaya, Dauhwaru, East Loloan, Pendem, Perancak, Sangkararung, Yehkuning (Yeh Kuning). Perancak is the place where
Nirartha purportedly landed upon arriving in Bali, around 1492. The temple called
Pura Gegé Perancak commemorates this event.
Melaya district Its ten villages are Belimbingsari (or Blimbingsari), Candikusuma, Ekasari, Gilimanuk, Manistutu, Melaya, Nusasari (or Nusa Sari), Tukadaya, Tuwed and Warnasari. A part of
West Bali National Park is on Gilimanuk, Melaya and Belimbingsari territories. File:Nelayan dan Perahunya dalam Pelayaran.jpg|Fishing in Gilimanuk Bay File:Melaya, Jembrana Regency, Bali 82252, Indonesia - panoramio.jpg|Gilimanuk port
Palasari and Belimbingsari This district includes the two christian communities, founded on land given by the colonial administration to stop conflicts between newly converted Christians and their original social environment: Belimbingsari ("essence of the
star fruit"), founded with 39 families in November 1939; and Palasari ("the place of the nutmeg trees") - which later became a quarter in Ekasari - in September 1940 with 18 people from the village of Tuka and 6 people from Gumbrih (who started the village with a core of 24 families), all fleeing Gianyar. The land, covered with wild jungle and very much a virgin territory, was then known as
Alas Rangda, the forest of the evil-witch Rangda. Nevertheless, the settlers perceived it as a "promised land". There have been economic difficulties in managing agricultural land, notably in the late 60s to early 70s; scarcity of water is a factor, another is that many residents have only limited agricultural land. Some villagers decided to relocate elsewhere in Indonesia. A study in 1990 notes that these two villages "stand in marked contrast to the adjacent Bali-Hindu desa of Nusasari, where the ‘work-ethic’ is less evident." It has become the seat of a pilot project for a successful Catholic mission. Belimbingsari has the Jemaat (congregation) "Pniel" church, largest
Protestant church in Bali (
Gereja Kristen Protestan di Bali or GKPB) and the center point of the village. Its original church did not look like a Balinese temple; but an earthquake destroyed it in 1971, and it was rebuilt in the local style and now can easily be mistaken for a Hindu temple - with the addition of some crosses on the roof, and a large signboard near the main antrance. It integrates the principles of
kosala-kosali, respecting the rules about the cardinal directions in relation to the human anatomy and, in accordance with that principle, its intermediate zone includes supporting buildings (
bale kulkul - where the
kulkul, or drum from a hollowed tree trunk, replaces the bell including its ornaments, as well as the way services are conducted: during the service the villagers wear ceremonial clothes traditionally worn in Hindu temples, and gamelan music accompanies the liturgies. and serves as flood control, irrigation, fisheries and recreation. It is also part of a tourism development plan concerning Eka Sari that also includes Palasari Old Church and Goa Maria, and cocoa agrotourism.
Mendoyo district Its eleven villages are Delodberawah (Delod Berawah), Mendoyo Dangin Tukad, Mendoyo Dauh Tukad, Penyaringan, Pergung, Pohanten, Tegalcangkring (Tegal Cangkring), Yeh Sumbul, Yehembang (Yeh Embang), Yehembang Kangin (Yeh Embang Kangin), Yehembang Kauh (Yeh Embang Kauh).
Rambut Siwi Temple is on Yeh Embang Kangin territory, between Yeh Satang and Yeh Embang. overlooking the beach, 500 m south off the coastal road between Pulukan (3,5 km) and Jehembang (2 km). Mendoyo, the district capital, is 10 km west. It is the biggest temple in the Jembrana regency. The word
rambut means "hair", an allusion to the legend that
Nirartha left a lock of his hair to protect the temple. File:Nelayan di Pengambengan.jpg|Fisherman in Pengambengan port File:Cupel, Negara, Jembrana Regency, Bali, Indonesia - panoramio.jpg|Cupel
Pekutatan district Its eight villages are Asahduren, Gumbrih, Manggissari, Medewi, Pangyangan, Pekutatan, Pengeragoan (Pengragoan), Pulukan. In front of the Puri Dajuma Resort in Pekutatan, is a concrete memorial to I Gusti Ngurah Rai, who landed at that spot in 1946 with 95 men to fight the Dutch colonials. The road from Pekutatan going north towards Pupuan, passes through a tunnel made by the aerial roots of a multisecular
banyan tree (and not, as often said, through the hollowed trunk). The tree, called Bunut Bolong, stands between Asahduren and Manggissari, 9 km from Pekutatan. It is considered as sacred and there are two shrines at the foot of the tree on its south side. The Juwuk Manis twin waterfall is also on Manggissari territory. == Demographics ==