Lea – a small settlement in Kabupaten Bone, South Sulawesi
Lea is a small settlement in Sulawesi Selatan (South Sulawesi) province in Indonesia, administratively part of Kabupaten Bone regency and Kecamatan Tellu Siattinge district. Based on its coordinates (-4.3197924, 120.3003035), it is located in the southern part of the Celebes peninsula, near the Bone Bay region. Direct, settlement-level statistical and encyclopedic sources for Lea are not currently available, so the following description is primarily based on verifiable data available at the Kabupaten Bone and Sulawesi Selatan province level, with this clearly indicated in all relevant sections.
General overview
Lea is not among the known or tourist-visited settlements of Sulawesi Selatan; rather, it should be considered a rural, agricultural community that fits within the Kecamatan Tellu Siattinge administrative unit in Kabupaten Bone. Kabupaten Bone is one of the vast regencies of Sulawesi Selatan, with its seat in Watampone (also known as Bone) city. Regarding the province as a whole, it can be said that Sulawesi Selatan had approximately 8 million inhabitants according to the 2010 census, and by mid-2024 this figure had risen to nearly 9.46 million, making it the most populous province on the island of Celebes. The Bone region is historically known as the cultural and political center of the Bugis people: sources reveal that the Kerajaan Bone (Kingdom of Bone) was one of Sulawesi Selatan's dominant powers during the golden age of the spice trade in the 15th–19th centuries. Kecamatan Tellu Siattinge, to which Lea belongs, is located in the inland areas within the regency and is typically inhabited by communities engaged in agriculture, primarily rice cultivation and fishing in the broader region.
Real estate and investment
No settlement-level real estate market data is available for Lea. In the broader context of Kabupaten Bone, it can be generally stated that the real estate market of Sulawesi Selatan province is predominantly concentrated around Makassar and its immediate agglomeration, while in inland, rural areas — thus in much of Bone regency — real estate prices and investment activity are at significantly lower levels, forming a market primarily serving local needs. Foreign nationals cannot acquire full ownership rights (Hak Milik) over land in Indonesia; the legal framework available to them includes Hak Pakai (use rights) and, under certain conditions, Hak Sewa (lease rights), which in rural areas manifests itself in lower transaction volumes and limited financing options for investment purposes. All of this is likely applicable to Lea and Kecamatan Tellu Siattinge as well, though this too can only be based on generalizable experience from provincial and national level regulations.
Safety and security
No statistics or documented data on public safety are available for Lea as an independent settlement. Regarding Sulawesi Selatan province as a whole, it can be stated that rural, agricultural communities are generally characterized by lower crime rates than larger cities; Makassar, the province's capital, presents the most statistically significant urban security challenges. The inland areas of Bone regency, to which Kecamatan Tellu Siattinge and thus Lea belong, have traditionally been characterized by rural, community-bonded societies, where local Bugis community norms and kinship networks play an important role in maintaining social order. Of course, conducting an actual security assessment would require up-to-date, on-site sources.
Tourist attractions
No tourist attractions specifically named in sources exist for Lea as an independent destination. It is generally known that in the Kabupaten Bone region, at the regency seat in Watampone, there is the Sao Mario Ri Gau Matowa Bone royal museum, which preserves the history of the Kingdom of Bone and the heritage of Bugis culture; this is one of the culturally significant points in the broader region. Sulawesi Selatan province, of which Kabupaten Bone and thus Lea are part, functioned as a gateway toward the Maluku islands during the spice trade era, and this historical heritage is felt at several points throughout the regency. Due to its proximity to Bone Bay, fishing and natural coastal landscapes are characteristic of the broader region, though specific beach or natural attractions linked to Lea cannot be named based on available sources.
Summary
Lea is a rural small settlement in Sulawesi Selatan province, within Kabupaten Bone, belonging to Kecamatan Tellu Siattinge district. In the absence of direct, settlement-level data, the place is best understood in the context of its broader region, Bone regency, and the South Sulawesian countryside defined by Bugis cultural heritage. From a tourism perspective, it is not a known destination; from a real estate market perspective, the general characteristics of rural Indonesian markets apply; reliable assessment of public security and detailed local conditions can only be provided from on-site and up-to-date sources.

