Brodot – a small settlement in the Bandarkedungmulyo subdistrict of Kabupaten Jombang
Brodot is a small Indonesian rural village (desa) located in East Java (Jawa Timur) province, within the territory of Kabupaten Jombang, specifically under the Bandarkedungmulyo kecamatan. Based on its geographical coordinates (-7.5535672, 112.1236468), it is situated in the central-western part of the kabupaten. It is located at a relatively short overland distance from Jombang city, the regency seat, and is connected to regional traffic through important road corridors that cross it. There is no independent, detailed Wikipedia-level source available about Brodot, so the description below is largely based on known data about Kabupaten Jombang and the broader East Javanese context.
General overview
Brodot is not among the locations known to a wider audience or prominent tourist destinations; its characteristics and daily life reflect the general image of East Javanese agricultural villages. The Bandarkedungmulyo kecamatan extends across the southwestern band of Kabupaten Jombang, and like most districts of the kabupaten, it is characterized predominantly by an agrarian landscape, with rice paddies and smaller plantations. The total area of Kabupaten Jombang is 1,159.50 km², and in 2024 the regency population was 1,376,547 inhabitants, with a population density of 1,187 people/km². Jombang city, the seat of the kabupaten, lies 79 kilometers southwest of Surabaya – the capital of East Java province. Jombang as a whole is referred to as "Kota Santri" (City of Islamic Scholars), as the number and significance of Islamic religious schools (pondok pesantren) operating in the area are outstanding; the Tebuireng, Denanyar, Tambak Beras, and Darul Ulum (Rejoso) pesantrens are considered defining institutions in Javanese Islamic education as a whole. The regency has produced, among others, the fourth president of the Indonesian Republic, K.H. Abdurrahman Wahid, national heroes K.H. Hasyim Asy'ari and K.H. Wahid Hasyim, and Semaun, the first general secretary of the PKI, as well as Islamic intellectual Nurcholish Madjid and writer-cultural politician Emha Ainun Najib. Brodot is situated within this regency environment woven through with strong Islamic religious and cultural traditions, which likely shapes its daily life and community fabric, although there are no independent source data available regarding this aspect of the village.
Real estate and investment
No detailed, referenceable data is available about Brodot's real estate market at either the local or regional level. Considering Kabupaten Jombang as a whole, it can be said that this is a moderately developed region in the interior of Java, where land prices and property values are generally considerably lower than in Surabaya's immediate agglomeration or on the tourism-prominent island of Bali. The agricultural and residential property market is driven by local internal demand and is barely integrated into investment markets linked to foreign capital. Under Indonesian law, based on the 1960 Agrarian Law and related regulations, foreign nationals are not permitted to acquire full ownership (hak milik) of land; foreigners may only acquire property rights through residence-permit-dependent usage rights (hak pakai) or through corporate structures, which requires thorough legal review before any investment decision. In Brodot and the Bandarkedungmulyo area, one might imagine primarily agricultural land and smaller residential properties that hold value in local terms as potential investment targets, but no source data can be cited regarding specific prices or parcellation data.
Safety and security
No publicly available village-specific crime statistics are available for Brodot's security situation, nor are such data included in this article's source material. Regarding the general picture of interior, rural districts in Kabupaten Jombang and East Java in general: closely-woven rural communities are typically characterized by relatively low violent crime, a phenomenon widely observed in similar rural regions in Indonesia. However, this does not guarantee safety, and in the absence of concrete statistics, it can only be stated that Brodot does not appear in any known source as an area with highlighted public security problems. For any traveler or person planning to stay there, it is advisable to seek up-to-date information from local authorities or the competent administrative bodies of Kabupaten Jombang.
Tourist attractions
No named tourist attractions are listed in available sources in the immediate vicinity of Brodot. Kabupaten Jombang, however, offers several well-known destinations at the regency level that provide a broader framework for getting to know the district. The most famous is the Tebuireng pesantren complex and its cemetery, where K.H. Hasyim Asy'ari and K.H. Abdurrahman Wahid (Gus Dur) are also buried; this location holds deep religious and historical pilgrimage appeal for Indonesian Muslims. The Tambak Beras and Denanyar pesantrens are likewise known religious and educational sites in the regency. These attractions primarily offer insight into the Javanese pesantren tradition for those interested in Islamic cultural and religious heritage. Available sources do not provide precise distances for accessibility from Brodot, but based on the regency's relatively compact size, they are generally accessible via the internal road network of the kabupaten.
Summary
Brodot is a poorly documented small Javanese village in the Bandarkedungmulyo kecamatan of Kabupaten Jombang in East Java. The available source material focuses primarily on the kabupaten as a whole, which is one of the important regions of Javanese Islamic education and religious tradition, the realm of the "Cities of Santri." Brodot itself is neither a prominent tourist destination nor a notable investment real estate target; its daily life suggests the image of an interior, agriculturally-oriented small Javanese community, though due to the scarcity of directly available data, it can only be presented embedded within the broader regional context.

