{{Short description|Group of villages in Bhutan}} {{Politics of Bhutan}} A '''gewog''' ({{langx|dz|རྒེད་འོག}} ''geok'', block), in the past also spelled as '''geog''',<ref>eg chapter 3 of the Thromde Act of Bhutan, 2007 http://www.nab.gov.bt/assets/uploads/docs/acts/2014/Thromde_act_of_Bhutan,_2007_Dzo_Eng.pdf {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20181222190731/http://www.nab.gov.bt/assets/uploads/docs/acts/2014/Thromde_act_of_Bhutan,_2007_Dzo_Eng.pdf |date=2018-12-22 }}</ref> is a group of villages in Bhutan. The head of a ''gewog''<ref>gewog is the transliteration used by the Royal Government of Bhutan, see chapter 2, para 4b of the Local Government Act, 2009 http://www.nab.gov.bt/assets/uploads/docs/acts/2014/The_Local_Government_Act_of_Bhutan,_2009eng1stextraordinary.pdf</ref> is called a ''gup''<ref>gup is the transliteration used by the Royal Government of Bhutan, see para 304, bullet j of the Local Government Act, 2009 http://www.nab.gov.bt/assets/uploads/docs/acts/2014/The_Local_Government_Act_of_Bhutan,_2009eng1stextraordinary.pdf</ref> ({{lang|dz|རྒེད་པོ་}} ''gepo'').<ref name=Driem>{{cite book|last1=Driem|first1=George van|title=Dzongkha = Rdzoṅ-kha|date=1998|publisher=Research School, CNWS|location=Leiden|isbn=978-9057890024|page=105}}</ref> Gewogs form a geographic administrative unit below dzongkhag districts (and dungkhag subdistricts, where they exist), and above Dzongkhag Thromde class B and Yenlag Thromde municipalities. Dzongkhag Thromde class A municipalities have their own independent local government body.<ref>see chapter 2 of the Local Government Act, 2009 http://www.nab.gov.bt/assets/uploads/docs/acts/2014/The_Local_Government_Act_of_Bhutan,_2009eng1stextraordinary.pdf</ref>

Bhutan comprises 205 gewogs, which average {{cvt|230|km2|sqmi}} in area. The gewogs in turn are divided into chewogs for elections and thromdes "municipalities" for administration. The Parliament of Bhutan passed legislation in 2002 and 2007 on the status, structure, and leadership of local governments, including gewogs. The most recent legislation by parliament regarding gewogs is the Local Government Act of Bhutan 2009.<ref name=GYT02>{{cite web |url=http://www.nationalcouncil.bt/images/stories/GYT_En_02.pdf |title=Geog Yargay Tshogchhung Chathrim 2002 |publisher=Government of Bhutan |date=2002-07-22 |access-date=2011-01-20 |archive-date=2025-03-11 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20250311164242/https://nationalcouncil.bt//images/stories/GYT_En_02.pdf |url-status=dead }}</ref><ref name=LGA07>{{cite web|url=http://www.nab.gov.bt/downloadsact/Eng30.pdf |title=Local Government Act of Bhutan 2007 |publisher=Government of Bhutan |date=2007-07-31 |access-date=2011-01-20 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110706163050/http://www.nab.gov.bt/downloadsact/Eng30.pdf |archive-date=2011-07-06 }}</ref><ref name=LGA09>{{cite web|url=http://www.nab.gov.bt/downloadsact/Dzo74.pdf |title=Local Government Act of Bhutan 2009 |publisher=Government of Bhutan |date=2009-09-11 |access-date=2011-01-20 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110706162642/http://www.nab.gov.bt/downloadsact/Dzo74.pdf |archive-date=2011-07-06 }}</ref> In July 2011, the government slated 11 gewogs across Bhutan for reorganization, including both mergers and bifurcations, to be debated in dzongkhag local governments. These changes are contemplated to promote ease of travel to gewog capitals and to equitably allocate development resources.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.bhutanobserver.bt/11-gewogs-bifurcated/ |title=11 Gewogs Could Be Bifurcated |first=Jigme |last=Wangchuk |date=2011-07-01 |access-date=2011-07-13 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110712214846/http://www.bhutanobserver.bt/11-gewogs-bifurcated/ |archive-date=2011-07-12 |url-status=dead }}</ref>

==Gewog administration== {{main|Local Government Act of Bhutan 2009}} Under the Local Government Act of 2009, each gewog is administered by a Gewog Tshogde (gewog council), subordinate to the Dzongkhag Tshogdu (district council). The Gewog Tshogde is composed of a ''Gup'' (headman), ''Mangmi'' (deputy), and between five and eight democratically elected Tshogpas from among villages or village groups. All representatives serve five-year terms, unless the local electorate petitions for an election (by a simple majority of the voting population) to vote no confidence in the local government (by at least two-thirds of the voting population). Representatives must be citizens between the ages of 25 and 65, be a resident of their constituency for at least one year, gain certification by the Election Commission, and otherwise qualify under Electoral Law.<ref name=LGA09/>

While the Gewog Tshogde has powers to regulate resources, manage public health and safety, and levy taxes on land, grazing, cattle, entertainment, and utilities, the gewog administration and all other local governments are prohibited to pass laws. The gewog administration has jurisdiction over roads, buildings (including architecture), recreational areas, utilities, agriculture, and the formulation of local five-year development plans. The Gewog Tshogde also prepares, reports, and expends its own gewog's budget under the supervision and approval of the Minister of Finance.<ref name=LGA09/>

==History== [[Image:Bhutan gewog location map.svg|thumb|right|350px|Gewogs of Bhutan ahead of local government elections, 2011<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.election-bhutan.org.bt/index.php?option=com_content&id=132&Itemid=84 |title=Delimitation |publisher=Election Commission, Government of Bhutan |year=2011 |access-date=2011-07-31 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20121024212143/http://www.election-bhutan.org.bt/index.php?option=com_content&id=132&Itemid=84 |archive-date=2012-10-24 |url-status=dead }}</ref>]] Beginning in the late 1980s, the King of Bhutan, Jigme Singye Wangchuck pursued a long-term programme of decentralization. In 1991, following this principle, the King enacted the first Geog Yargay Tshogchung as a framework for local administration.<ref name=GYT02/> Under the first Geog Yargay Tshochung, gewogs became official administrative units, each headed by a ''Gup'' or headman. The first-ever elections in Bhutan were held at that time, with a representative from each household voting to select their local ''Gup''.

In 2002, the Parliament of Bhutan enacted a second, more comprehensive Chathrim (Act) also called the Geog Yargay Tshochung. Under the Geog Yargay Tshochung of 2002, gewog administration included the ''Gup'', ''Mangmi'' (deputy), ''Tshogpa'' (village or village cluster representative), and the non-voting ''Chupon'' (village messenger) and Gewog Clerk. ''Gup'' and ''Mangmi'' sat for three-year terms while normal representatives sat for one year. The body had a two-thirds quorum requirement, and voted by simple majority. The Chathrim of 2002 empowered gewogs to levy rural taxes, maintain and regulate natural resources, and manage community and cultural life.<ref name=GYT02/>

The Chathrim of 2002 was superseded by the Local Government Act of 2007, which expanded local bureaucracy and vested more powers in gewog administrators, including enforcement of driglam namzha.<ref name=responsibilities>{{cite web |url=http://www.gnhc.gov.bt/Assignment_of%20Responsibilities_to_LGs-GNHC_Website.pdf |title=Assignment of Functional and Financial Responsibilities to Local Governments |publisher=Government of Bhutan, Gross National Happiness Commission |year=2007 |access-date=2011-01-24 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20100613170657/http://www.gnhc.gov.bt/Assignment_of%20Responsibilities_to_LGs-GNHC_Website.pdf |archive-date=2010-06-13 |url-status=dead }}</ref> Under the Act of 2007, additional levels of local administration were carved out from gewogs, namely Dzongkhag Thromde Tshogdes and Gyelyong Thromde Tshogdus. The former were democratically elected bodies under direct dzongkhag management; the latter were democratic autonomous urban areas, or special cities, independent of dzongkhag management. Up through the enactment of the Local Government Act of 2009, gewogs were subdivided administratively into chiwogs, comprising several villages.<ref name=LGA07/>

Since the Act of 2009, Dzongkhag Thromde Tshogdes, Gyelyong Thromde Tshogdus, and chiwogs have been replaced by thromdes (municipalities) as tertiary administrative divisions. Depending on the population and development of each thromde, it either has an independent bureaucracy ("Class A" Thromdes) or is directly administered by the gewog or dzongkhag ("Class B" and "Dzongkhag Yenlag" Thromdes).<ref name=LGA09/>

===Gewog changes since 2000=== In 2002, there were 199 gewogs in Bhutan's 20 dzongkhags;<ref name=9FYP>{{cite web|url=http://www.health.gov.bt/healthFYP/9FYP/PartThree.pdf |title=Part Three: Dzongkhag and Geog Health Sector |publisher=Government of Bhutan, Ministry of Health |year=2002 |access-date=2011-01-22 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110706162637/http://www.health.gov.bt/healthFYP/9FYP/PartThree.pdf |archive-date=2011-07-06 }}</ref> by 2005, there were 205.<ref name=geohive>{{cite web|url=http://www.geohive.com/cntry/bhutan.aspx |title=The Kingdom of Bhutan – Administrative Units |work=Geo Hive |access-date=2011-01-22}}</ref>

In Tsirang District, Chanautey, Gairigaun, Tshokhana, and Tsirang Dangra Gewogs were disestablished; in the meanwhile Barshong, Rangthangling, Tsholingkhar, and Tsirangtoe Gewogs were created. Likewise, in Sarpang District, Sarpangtar Gewog was disestablished. Chukha District no longer contains Bhulajhora Gewog, but now contains Sampheling Gewog. Samtse District no longer contains Ghumauney, Mayona, and Nainital Gewogs; it now contains Ugentse and Yoeseltse Gewogs. In Thimphu District, Bapbi Gewog disappeared. In Samdrup Jongkhar District, Bakuli and Hastinapur Gewogs disappeared, replaced by Dewathang, Langchenphu, Pemathang, Phuntshothang, Serthi, and Wangphu Gewogs. Trashiyangtse District saw the creation of three additional gewogs: Bumdeling, Khamdang, and Ramjar.<ref name=9FYP/><ref name=geohive/>

Since 2005, gewogs and dzongkhags have continued to evolve. On April 26, 2007, Lhamozingkha Dungkhag (subdistrict) was formally transferred from Sarpang Dzongkhag to Dagana Dzongkhag,<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.sarpang.gov.bt/newsDetail.php?id=13 |title=Sarpang Dzongkhag Administration online – "Handing-Taking" |date=2008-03-19 |access-date=2011-01-23 |archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20080319174041/http://www.sarpang.gov.bt/newsDetail.php?id=13 |archive-date = 2008-03-19}}</ref> affecting the town of Lhamozingkha and three constituent gewogs – Lhamoy Zingkha, Deorali and Nichula (Zinchula) – that formed the westernmost part of Sarpang and now form the southernmost part of Dagana.<ref name=sarpang>{{cite web|url=http://www.gnhc.gov.bt/fyp/Dzongkhags/Sarpang.pdf |title=Sarpang Dzongkhag Ninth Plan (2002-2007) }}{{dead link|date=January 2017 |bot=InternetArchiveBot |fix-attempted=yes }}</ref>

==The gewogs of Bhutan== The following is a list of 205 gewogs of Bhutan by dzongkhag in alphabetical order:<ref>Note that this list is based mainly on information of the Election Commission, which not necessarily follows the general RGOB usage. Compare for instance the different spelling of the gewogs in Chhukha dzongkhag on their own web site: [https://web.archive.org/web/20171222162513/http://gov.bt/local-government/chhukha-dzongkhag/]</ref> {{div col}} {| class="wikitable" style="width:90%; text-align:center" align="center" ! Dzongkhag ! Gewog |- | rowspan=4 valign="top" | Bumthang<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.election-bhutan.org.bt/2011/finaldelimitation/bumthang.pdf |title=Chiwogs in Bumthang |publisher=Election Commission, Government of Bhutan |year=2011 |access-date=2011-07-28 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20111002183315/http://www.election-bhutan.org.bt/2011/finaldelimitation/bumthang.pdf |archive-date=2011-10-02 }}</ref><br />frameless|center|200px | Chhoekhor (1)<br />ཆོས་འཁོར་ |- | Chhume (2)<br />ཆུ་མིག་ |- | Tang (3)<br />སྟང་ |- | Ura (4)<br />ཨུ་ར་ |- | rowspan=11 valign="top" | Chhukha<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.election-bhutan.org.bt/2011/finaldelimitation/chukha.pdf |title=Chiwogs in Chukha |publisher=Election Commission, Government of Bhutan |year=2011 |access-date=2011-07-28 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20111002183400/http://www.election-bhutan.org.bt/2011/finaldelimitation/chukha.pdf |archive-date=2011-10-02 }}</ref><br />frameless|center|200px | Bjachho<br />བྱག་ཕྱོགས་ |- | Bongo<br />སྦོང་སྒོར་ |- | Chapcha<br />སྐྱབས་ཆ་ |- | Darla<br />དར་ལ་ |- | Dungna<br />གདུང་ན་ |- | Geling<br />དགེ་གླིང་ |- | Getana<br />གད་སྟག་ན་ |- | Lokchina<br />ལོག་ཅི་ན་ |- | Metakha<br />སྨད་བཏབ་ཁ་ |- | Phuentsholing<br />ཕུན་ཚོགས་གླིང་ |- | Sampheling<br />བསམ་འཕེལ་གླིང་ |- | rowspan=14 valign="top" | Dagana<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.election-bhutan.org.bt/2011/finaldelimitation/Dagana.pdf |title=Chiwogs in Dagana |publisher=Election Commission, Government of Bhutan |year=2011 |access-date=2011-07-28 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160304193802/http://www.election-bhutan.org.bt/2011/finaldelimitation/Dagana.pdf |archive-date=2016-03-04 |url-status=dead }}</ref><br />frameless|center|200px | Dorona<br />རྡོ་རོ་ན་ |- | Drujegang<br />འབྲུག་རྗེས་སྒང་ |- | Gesarling<br />གེ་སར་གླིང་ |- | Goshi<br />སྒོ་བཞི་ |- | Kana<br />བཀར་ན་ |- | Karmaling<br />ཀརྨ་གླིང་ |- | Khebisa<br />ཁེ་སྦིས་ས་ |- | Lajab<br />ལ་རྒྱབ་ |- | Lhamoi Zingkha<br />ལྷ་མོའི་རྫིང་ཁ་ |- | Nichula<br />ནི་ཅུ་ལ་ |- | Trashiding<br />བཀྲིས་ལྡིང་ |- | Tsangkha<br />གཙང་ཁ་ |- | Tsendagang<br />བཙན་མདའ་སྒང་ |- | Tseza<br />བརྩེ་ཟ་ |- | rowspan=4 valign="top" | Gasa<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.election-bhutan.org.bt/2011/finaldelimitation/gasa.pdf |title=Chiwogs in Gasa |publisher=Election Commission, Government of Bhutan |year=2011 |access-date=2011-07-28 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20111002184138/http://www.election-bhutan.org.bt/2011/finaldelimitation/gasa.pdf |archive-date=2011-10-02 |url-status=dead }}</ref><br />frameless|center|200px | Khamaed<br />ཁ་སྨད་ |- | Khatoe<br />ཁ་སྟོད་ |- | Laya<br />ལ་ཡ་ |- | Lunana<br />ལུང་ནག་ན་ |- | rowspan=6 valign="top" | Haa<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.election-bhutan.org.bt/2011/finaldelimitation/Haa.pdf |title=Chiwogs in Haa |publisher=Election Commission, Government of Bhutan |year=2011 |access-date=2011-07-28 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20111002184232/http://www.election-bhutan.org.bt/2011/finaldelimitation/Haa.pdf |archive-date=2011-10-02 |url-status=dead }}</ref><br />frameless|center|200px | Bji<br />སྦྱིས་ |- | Gakiling<br />དགའ་སྐྱིད་གླིང་ |- | Katsho<br />སྐར་ཚོགས་ |- | Samar<br />ས་དམར་ |- | Sangbay<br />གསང་སྦས་ |- | Uesu<br />དབུས་སུ་ |- | rowspan=8 valign="top" | Lhuentse<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.election-bhutan.org.bt/2011/finaldelimitation/lhuentse.pdf |title=Chiwogs in Lhuentse |publisher=Election Commission, Government of Bhutan |year=2011 |access-date=2011-07-28 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20111002184443/http://www.election-bhutan.org.bt/2011/finaldelimitation/lhuentse.pdf |archive-date=2011-10-02 |url-status=dead }}</ref><br />frameless|center|200px | Gangzur<br />སྒང་ཟུར་ |- | Khoma<br />མཁོ་མ་ |- | Jarey<br />རྒྱ་རས་ |- | Kurtoed<br />ཀུར་སྟོད་ |- | Menbi<br />སྨན་སྦིས་ |- | Metsho<br />སྨད་མཚོ་ |- | Minjay<br />སྨིན་རྒྱས་ |- | Tsenkhar<br />སཙན་མཁར་ |- | rowspan=17 valign="top" | Mongar<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.election-bhutan.org.bt/2011/finaldelimitation/Mongar.pdf |title=Chiwogs in Monggar |publisher=Election Commission, Government of Bhutan |year=2011 |access-date=2011-07-28 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20111002184557/http://www.election-bhutan.org.bt/2011/finaldelimitation/Mongar.pdf |archive-date=2011-10-02 |url-status=dead }}</ref><br />frameless|center|200px | Balam<br />བ་ལམ་ |- | Chali<br />ཅ་གླིང་ |- | Chaskhar<br />ལྕགས་ས་མཁར་ |- | Drametse<br />དགྲ་མེད་རྩེ་ |- | Drepong<br />འབྲེས་སྤུངས་ |- | Gongdue<br />དགོངས་འདུས་ |- | Jurmey<br />འགྱུར་མེད་ |- | Kengkhar<br />སྐྱེངས་མཁར་ |- | Mongar<br />མོང་སྒར་ |- | Narang<br />ན་རང་ |- | Ngatshang<br />སྔ་ཚང་ |- | Saling<br />ས་གླིང་ |- | Shermuhoong<br />ཤེར་མུ་ཧཱུྃ་ |- | Silambi<br />སི་ལམ་སྦི་ |- | Thangrong<br />ཐང་རོང་ |- | Tsakaling<br />ཙ་ཀ་གླིང་ |- | Tsamang<br />རྩ་མང་ |- | rowspan=10 valign="top" | Paro<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.election-bhutan.org.bt/2011/finaldelimitation/Paro.pdf |title=Chiwogs in Paro |publisher=Election Commission, Government of Bhutan |year=2011 |access-date=2011-07-28 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20111002184808/http://www.election-bhutan.org.bt/2011/finaldelimitation/Paro.pdf |archive-date=2011-10-02 |url-status=dead }}</ref><br />frameless|center|200px | Dokar<br />རྡོ་དཀར་ |- | Dopshari<br />རྡོབ་ཤར་རི་ |- | Doteng<br />རྡོ་སྟེང་ |- | Hungrel<br />ཧཱུྃ་རལ་ |- | Lamgong<br />ལམ་གོང་ |- | Lungnyi<br />ལུང་གཉིས་ |- | Naja<br />ན་རྒྱ་ |- | Shapa<br />ཤར་པ་ |- | Tsento<br />བཙན་ཏོ་ |- | Wangchang<br />ཝང་ལྕང་ |- | rowspan=11 valign="top" | Pema Gatshel<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.election-bhutan.org.bt/2011/finaldelimitation/pgatshel.pdf |title=Chiwogs in Pema Gatshel |publisher=Election Commission, Government of Bhutan |year=2011 |access-date=2011-07-28 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20111002185051/http://www.election-bhutan.org.bt/2011/finaldelimitation/pgatshel.pdf |archive-date=2011-10-02 |url-status=dead }}</ref><br />frameless|center|200px | Chimoong<br />ཕྱི་མུང་ |- | Chokhorling<br />ཆོས་འཁོར་གླིང་ |- | Chongshing<br />ལྕོང་ཤིང་ |- | Dechheling<br />བདེ་ཆེན་གླིང་ |- | Dungmaed<br />གདུང་སྨད་ |- | Khar<br />མཁར་ |- | Nanong<br />ན་ནོང་ |- | Norbugang<br />ནོར་བུ་སྒང་ |- | Shumar<br />ཤུ་མར་ |- | Yurung<br />ཡུ་རུང་ |- | Zobel<br />བཟོ་སྦལ་ |- | rowspan=11 valign="top" | Punakha<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.election-bhutan.org.bt/2011/finaldelimitation/Punakha.pdf |title=Chiwogs in Punakha |publisher=Election Commission, Government of Bhutan |year=2011 |access-date=2011-07-28 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20111002185158/http://www.election-bhutan.org.bt/2011/finaldelimitation/Punakha.pdf |archive-date=2011-10-02 |url-status=dead }}</ref><br />frameless|center|200px | Barp<br />བརཔ་ |- | Chhubug<br />ཆུ་སྦུག་ |- | Dzomi<br />འཅོམས་མི་ |- | Goenshari<br />དགོམ་ཤ་རི་ |- | Guma<br />གུ་མ་ |- | Kabisa<br />དཀར་སྦི་ས་ |- | Lingmukha<br />གླིང་མུ་ཁ་ |- | Shenga Bjemi<br />ཤེལ་རྔ་_སྦྱེ་མི་ |- | Talog<br />རྟ་ལོག་ |- | Toepisa<br />སཏོད་པའི་ས་ |- | Toewang<br />སྟོད་ཝང་ |- | rowspan=11 valign="top" | Samdrup Jongkhar<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.election-bhutan.org.bt/2011/finaldelimitation/sj.pdf |title=Chiwogs in Samdrup Jongkhar |publisher=Election Commission, Government of Bhutan |year=2011 |access-date=2011-07-28 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20111002185744/http://www.election-bhutan.org.bt/2011/finaldelimitation/sj.pdf |archive-date=2011-10-02 }}</ref><br />frameless|center|200px | Dewathang<br />དབེ་བ་ཐང་ |- | Gomdar<br />སྒམ་དར་ |- | Langchenphu<br />གླང་ཅན་ཕུ་ |- | Lauri<br />ལའུ་རི་ |- | Martshala<br />མར་ཚྭ་ལ་ |- | Orong<br />ཨོ་རོང་ |- | Pemathang<br />པདྨ་ཐང་ |- | Phuntshothang<br />ཕུན་ཚོགས་ཐང་ |- | Samrang<br />བསམ་རང་ |- | Serthi<br />གསེར་ཐིག་ |- | Wangphu<br />ཝང་ཕུག་ |- |} {| class="wikitable" style="width:90%; text-align:center" align="center" ! Dzongkhag ! Gewog |- | rowspan=15 valign="top" | Samtse<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.election-bhutan.org.bt/2011/finaldelimitation/Samtse.pdf |title=Chiwogs in Samtse |publisher=Election Commission, Government of Bhutan |year=2011 |access-date=2011-07-28 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20111002185843/http://www.election-bhutan.org.bt/2011/finaldelimitation/Samtse.pdf |archive-date=2011-10-02 |url-status=dead }}</ref><br />frameless|center|200px | Dungtoe<br />གདུང་སྟོད་ |- | Dophoogchen<br />རྡོ་ཕུག་ཅན་ |- | Duenchukha<br />བདུམ་ཅུ་ཁ་ |- | Namgaychhoeling<br />རྣམ་རྒྱས་ཆོས་གླིང་ |- | Norbugang<br />ནོར་བུ་སྒང་ |- | Norgaygang<br />ནོར་རྒྱས་སྒང་ |- | Pemaling<br />པདྨ་གླིང་ |- | Phuentshogpelri<br />ཕུན་ཚོགས་དབལ་རི་ |- | Samtse<br />བསམ་རྩེ་ |- | Sangngagchhoeling<br />གསང་སྔགས་ཆོས་གླིང་ |- | Tading<br />རྟ་སྡིང་ |- | Tashicholing<br />བཀྲིས་ཙོས་གླིང་ |- | Tendruk<br />བསྟང་འབྲུག |- | Ugentse<br />ཨྱོན་རྩེ་ |- | Yoeseltse<br />འོད་གསལ་རྩེ་ |- | rowspan=12 valign="top" | Sarpang<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.election-bhutan.org.bt/2011/finaldelimitation/Sarpang.pdf |title=Chiwogs in Sarpang |publisher=Election Commission, Government of Bhutan |year=2011 |access-date=2011-07-28 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20111002190531/http://www.election-bhutan.org.bt/2011/finaldelimitation/Sarpang.pdf |archive-date=2011-10-02 |url-status=dead }}</ref><br />frameless|center|200px | Chhuzagang<br />ཆུ་འཛག་སྒང་ |- | Chhudzom<br />ཆུ་འཛོམས་ |- | Dekiling<br />བདེ་སྐྱིད་གླིང་ |- | Gakiling<br />དགའ་སྐྱིད་གླིང་ |- | Gelephu<br />དགེ་ལེགས་ཕུ་ |- | Jigmechholing<br />འཇིགས་མེད་ཆོས་གླིང་ |- | Samtenling<br />བསམ་གཏན་གླིང་ |- | Senggey<br />སེ་ངྒེ་ |- | Sherzhong<br />གསེར་གཞོང་ |- | Shompangkha<br />ཤོམ་སྤང་ཁ་ |- | Tareythang<br />རྟ་རས་ཐང་ |- | Umling<br />ཨུམ་གླིང་ |- | rowspan=8 valign="top" | Thimphu<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.election-bhutan.org.bt/2011/finaldelimitation/Thimphu.pdf |title=Chiwogs in Thimphu |publisher=Election Commission, Government of Bhutan |year=2011 |access-date=2011-07-28 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20111002190808/http://www.election-bhutan.org.bt/2011/finaldelimitation/Thimphu.pdf |archive-date=2011-10-02 }}</ref><br />frameless|center|200px | Chang<br />ལྕང་ |- | Darkala<br />དར་དཀར་ལ་ |- | Genye<br />དགེ་བསྙེན་ |- | Kawang<br />ཀ་ཝང་ |- | Lingzhi<br />གླིང་གཞི་ |- | Mewang<br />སྨད་ཝང་ |- | Naro<br />ན་རོ་ |- | Soe<br />སྲོས་ |- | rowspan=15 valign="top" | Trashigang<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.election-bhutan.org.bt/2011/finaldelimitation/tgang.pdf |title=Chiwogs in Trashigang |publisher=Election Commission, Government of Bhutan |year=2011 |access-date=2011-07-28 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20111002191009/http://www.election-bhutan.org.bt/2011/finaldelimitation/tgang.pdf |archive-date=2011-10-02 }}</ref><br />frameless|center|200px | Bartsham<br />བར་མཚམས་ |- | Bidung<br />སྦིས་གདུང་ |- | Kanglung<br />བཀང་ལུང་ |- | Kangpar<br />རྐང་པར་ |- | Khaling<br />ཁ་གླིང་ |- | Lumang<br />ཀླུ་མང་ |- | Merag<br />མེ་རག་ |- | Phongmed<br />ཕོངས་མེད་ |- | Radi<br />ར་དི་ |- | Sagteng<br />སག་སྟེང་ |- | Samkhar<br />བསམ་མཁར་ |- | Shongphoog<br />ཤོང་ཕུག་ |- | Thrimshing<br />ཁྲིམས་ཤིང་ |- | Uzorong<br />ཨུ་མཛོ་རོང་ |- | Yangnyer<br />ཡངས་ཉེར་ |- | rowspan=8 valign="top" | Trashi Yangtse<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.election-bhutan.org.bt/2011/finaldelimitation/tyangtse.pdf |title=Chiwogs in Trashiyangtse |publisher=Election Commission, Government of Bhutan |year=2011 |access-date=2011-07-28 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20111002191200/http://www.election-bhutan.org.bt/2011/finaldelimitation/tyangtse.pdf |archive-date=2011-10-02 |url-status=dead }}</ref><br />frameless|center|200px | Bumdeling<br />བུམ་སྡེ་གླིང་ |- | Jamkhar<br />འཇམ་མཁར་ |- | Khamdang<br />ཁམས་དྭངས་ |- | Ramjar<br />རམ་སྦྱར་ |- | Toetsho<br />སྟོད་མཚོ་ |- | Tomzhang<br />སྟོང་མི་གཞང་ས་ |- | Yalang<br />ཡ་ལང་ |- | Yangtse<br />གཡང་རྩེ་ |- | rowspan=5 valign="top" | Trongsa<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.election-bhutan.org.bt/2011/finaldelimitation/trongsa.pdf |title=Chiwogs in Trongsa |publisher=Election Commission, Government of Bhutan |year=2011 |access-date=2011-07-28 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20111002191306/http://www.election-bhutan.org.bt/2011/finaldelimitation/trongsa.pdf |archive-date=2011-10-02 |url-status=dead }}</ref><br />frameless|center|200px | Dragteng<br />བྲག་སྟེང་ |- | Korphoog<br />སྐོར་ཕུག་ |- | Langthil<br />གླང་མཐིལ་ |- | Nubi<br />ནུ་སྦིས་ |- | Tangsibji<br />སྟང་སི་སྦྱིས་ |- | rowspan=12 valign="top" | Tsirang<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.election-bhutan.org.bt/2011/finaldelimitation/Tsirang.pdf |title=Chiwogs in Tsirang |publisher=Election Commission, Government of Bhutan |year=2011 |access-date=2011-07-28 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20111002191414/http://www.election-bhutan.org.bt/2011/finaldelimitation/Tsirang.pdf |archive-date=2011-10-02 }}</ref><br />frameless|center|200px | Barshong<br />བར་གཤོང་ |- | Dunglegang<br />དུང་ལ་སྒང་ |- | Gosarling<br />སྒོ་གསར་གླིང་ |- | Kikhorthang<br />དཀྱིལ་འཁོར་ཐང་ |- | Mendrelgang<br />མནྜལ་སྒང་ |- | Patshaling<br />པ་ཚ་གླིང་ |- | Phuntenchu<br />སྤུང་རྟེན་ཆུ་ |- | Rangthangling<br />རང་ཐང་གླིང་ |- | Semjong<br />སེམས་ལྗོངས་ |- | Sergithang<br />གསེར་གྱི་ཐང་ |- | Tsholingkhar<br />མཚོ་གླིང་མཁར་ |- | Tsirangtoe<br />རྩི་རང་སྟོད་ |- | rowspan=15 valign="top" | Wangdue Phodrang<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.election-bhutan.org.bt/2011/finaldelimitation/wangdue.pdf |title=Chiwogs in Wangdue Phodrang |publisher=Election Commission, Government of Bhutan |year=2011 |access-date=2011-07-28 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20111002191701/http://www.election-bhutan.org.bt/2011/finaldelimitation/wangdue.pdf |archive-date=2011-10-02 }}</ref><br />frameless|center|200px | Athang<br />ཨ་ཐང་ |- | Bjendag<br />སྦྱེད་ནག་ |- | Darkar<br />དར་དཀར་ |- | Dangchu<br />དྭངས་ཆུ་ |- | Gangteng<br />སྒང་སྟེང་ |- | Gasetsho Gom<br />དགའ་སེང་ཚོ་གོངམ་ |- | Gasetsho Wom<br />དགའ་སེང་ཆོ་འོགམ་ |- | Kazhi<br />ཀ་གཞི་ |- | Nahi<br />ན་ཧི་ |- | Nyisho<br />ཉི་ཤོག་ |- | Phangyul<br />ཕངས་ཡུལ་ |- | Phobji<br />ཕོབ་སྦྱིས་ |- | Ruepisa<br />རུས་སྦིས་ས་ |- | Sephu<br />སྲས་ཕུག་ |- | Thedtsho<br />ཐེད་ཚོ་ |- | rowspan=8 valign="top" | Zhemgang<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.election-bhutan.org.bt/2011/finaldelimitation/Zhemgang.pdf |title=Chiwogs in Zhemgang |publisher=Election Commission, Government of Bhutan |year=2011 |access-date=2011-07-28 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20111002192056/http://www.election-bhutan.org.bt/2011/finaldelimitation/Zhemgang.pdf |archive-date=2011-10-02 }}</ref><br />frameless|center|200px | Bardo<br />བར་རྡོ་ |- | Bjoka<br />འབྱོག་ཀ། |- | Goshing<br />སྒོ་ཤིང་། |- | Nangkor<br />ནང་སྐོར། |- | Ngangla<br />ངང་ལ། |- | Phangkhar<br />ཕང་མཁར། |- | Shingkhar<br />ཤིང་མཁར། |- | Trong<br />ཀྲོང་། |- |} {{div col end}}

==See also== *Dzongkhag **Dungkhag *Chiwog *Local Government Act of Bhutan 2009 *List of terms for country subdivisions

==References== {{reflist|2}}

==External links== *{{cite web|url=http://www.health.gov.bt/healthFYP/9FYP/PartThree.pdf |title=Part Three: Dzongkhag and Geog Health Sector |publisher=Government of Bhutan, Ministry of Health |year=2002 |access-date=2011-01-22 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110706162637/http://www.health.gov.bt/healthFYP/9FYP/PartThree.pdf |archive-date=2011-07-06 }}, ''listing 199 Gewogs existing through 2002.'' *{{cite web|url=http://www.geohive.com/cntry/bhutan.aspx |title=The Kingdom of Bhutan – Administrative Units |work=Geo Hive |access-date=2011-01-22}}, ''listing 205 Gewogs according to a census in 2005.'' *{{cite web|url=http://www.bhutanobserver.bt/farm-road-goes-to-dechiling-gewog/ |title=Farm road goes to Dechiling Gewog |first=Gembo |last=Namgyal |publisher=Bhutan Observer online |date=2010-05-11 |access-date=2011-02-12 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110120005459/http://www.bhutanobserver.bt/farm-road-goes-to-dechiling-gewog/ |archive-date=2011-01-20 }} ''reporting Nganglam Gewog in 2010, absent in older gewog lists.''

{{Gewogs of Bhutan}} {{Bhutan topics}} {{Articles on second-level administrative divisions of Asian countries}}

Category:Gewogs of Bhutan Bhutan, Gewogs Bhutan 2 Category:Bhutan geography-related lists