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[[File:CantinoPlanisphere-Mascareignes.png|thumb|325px|Map of Madagascar and the [[Mascarene Islands]] (1502)]] |
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{{Use mdy dates|date=August 2019}} |
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The history of [[Madagascar]] is distinguished by the early isolation of the landmass from the ancient [[supercontinents]] containing [[Africa]] and [[India]], and by the island's late colonization by human settlers arriving in outrigger canoes from [[Islands of Indonesia|the Sunda islands]] between 200 BC and 500 AD. These two factors facilitated the evolution and survival of thousands of endemic plant and animal species, some of which have gone extinct or are currently threatened with extinction due to the pressures of a growing human population. Over the past two thousand years the island has received waves of settlers of diverse origins including Austronesian, Bantu, Arab, South Asian, Chinese and European populations. |
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{{Culture of Madagascar}} |
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{{History of Madagascar}} |
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The '''History of Madagascar''' started from the ancient [[supercontinent]] of [[Pangaea]], containing amongst others the [[Africa|African continent]] and the [[Indian subcontinent]], and by the island's late colonization by human settlers from the [[Sunda Islands]] ([[Malay Archipelago]]) and from East Africa.<ref>{{Cite journal|last1=Heiske|first1=Margit|last2=Alva|first2=Omar|last3=Pereda-Loth|first3=Veronica|last4=Van Schalkwyk|first4=Matthew|last5=Radimilahy|first5=Chantal|last6=Letellier|first6=Thierry|last7=Rakotarisoa|first7=Jean-Aimé|last8=Pierron|first8=Denis|title=Genetic evidence and historical theories of the Asian and African origins of the present Malagasy population|journal=Human Molecular Genetics|year=2021|volume=30|issue=R1|pages=R72–R78|language=en|doi=10.1093/hmg/ddab018|pmid=33481023|doi-access=free}}</ref> |
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These two factors facilitated the evolution and survival of thousands of [[Fauna of Madagascar|endemic plant and animal species]], some of which have gone extinct or are currently threatened with extinction. |
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Trade in the Indian Ocean at the time of first colonization of Madagascar was dominated by Indonesian ships, probably of [[Borobudur ship]] and [[K'un-lun po]] types.<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Beale |first1=Philip |date=2006 |title=From Indonesia to Africa: Borobudur Ship Expedition |url= |journal=ZIFF Journal |volume=3 |pages=17–24}}</ref><ref name=":6">{{Cite journal |last=Manguin |first=Pierre-Yves |date=September 1980 |title=The Southeast Asian Ship: An Historical Approach |journal=Journal of Southeast Asian Studies |volume=11 |issue=2 |pages=266–276 |doi=10.1017/S002246340000446X |jstor=20070359|s2cid=162220129 }}</ref> |
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Over two thousand years, the island has received waves of settlers of diverse origins, primarily [[Austronesian languages|Austronesian]] and [[Bantu peoples|Bantu]].<ref>{{Cite journal|last1=Pierron|first1=Denis|last2=Heiske|first2=Margit|last3=Razafindrazaka|first3=Harilanto|last4=Rakoto|first4=Ignace|last5=Rabetokotany|first5=Nelly|last6=Ravololomanga|first6=Bodo|last7=Rakotozafy|first7=Lucien M.-A.|last8=Rakotomalala|first8=Mireille Mialy|last9=Razafiarivony|first9=Michel|last10=Rasoarifetra|first10=Bako|last11=Raharijesy|first11=Miakabola Andriamampianina|date=2017-08-08|title=Genomic landscape of human diversity across Madagascar|journal=Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences|language=en|volume=114|issue=32|pages=E6498–E6506|doi=10.1073/pnas.1704906114|issn=0027-8424|pmc=5559028|pmid=28716916|bibcode=2017PNAS..114E6498P |doi-access=free}}</ref> Centuries of intermarriages between both groups created the [[Malagasy people]], who are roughly an equal mixture of both groups. They speak the [[Malagasy language|Malagasy]], an [[Austronesian languages|Austronesian language]] with Bantu, French and Arabic influences.<ref>{{Cite journal|last1=Pierron|first1=Denis|last2=Razafindrazaka|first2=Harilanto|last3=Pagani|first3=Luca|last4=Ricaut|first4=François-Xavier|last5=Antao|first5=Tiago|last6=Capredon|first6=Mélanie|last7=Sambo|first7=Clément|last8=Radimilahy|first8=Chantal|last9=Rakotoarisoa|first9=Jean-Aimé|last10=Blench|first10=Roger M.|last11=Letellier|first11=Thierry|date=2014-01-21|title=Genome-wide evidence of Austronesian–Bantu admixture and cultural reversion in a hunter-gatherer group of Madagascar|journal=Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences|language=en|volume=111|issue=3|pages=936–941|doi=10.1073/pnas.1321860111|issn=0027-8424|pmc=3903192|pmid=24395773|bibcode=2014PNAS..111..936P|doi-access=free}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|last=Sanger Institute |date=May 4, 2005 |access-date=April 30, 2006 |archive-date=March 3, 2011 |title=The cryptic past of Madagascar: Human inhabitants of Madagascar are genetically unique |url=http://www.sanger.ac.uk/about/press/2005/050504.html |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110303210750/http://www.sanger.ac.uk/about/press/2005/050504.html |url-status=dead }}</ref><ref name="Cox">{{cite journal|last1=Cox|first1=Murray P.|last2=Nelson|first2=Michael G.|last3=Tumonggor|first3=Meryanne K.|last4=Ricaut|first4=François-X.|last5=Sudoyo|first5=Herawati|date=2012|title=A small cohort of Island Southeast Asian women founded Madagascar|journal=Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences|volume=279|issue=1739|pages=2761–2768|doi=10.1098/rspb.2012.0012|pmc=3367776|pmid=22438500}}</ref><ref name=":0" /> |
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The majority of the population of Madagascar today is a mixture of [[Austronesian peoples|Austronesian]], [[North Indian]], [[Arab]], [[Somali people|Somali]] and [[Bantu people|Bantu]] settlers from [[Southeast Asia]], [[Gujarat]], the [[Arabian Peninsula]], [[Somalia]] and [[East Africa]], respectively.<ref name="Ames">Glenn Joseph Ames, Distant lands and diverse cultures: the French experience in Asia, 1600-1700, (Greenwood Publishing Group: 2003), p.101.</ref> Years of intermarriages created the [[Malagasy people]], who primarily speak [[Malagasy language|Malagasy]], an [[Austronesian]] language with [[Bantu languages|Bantu]] influences. Most of the genetic makeup of the average Malagasy, however, reflects an almost equal blend of Austronesian and Bantu influences (especially on coastal regions).<ref>{{cite web | last = Sanger Institute |date = May 4, 2005 |accessdate = March 21, 2011 |archivedate = March 21, 2011 | title = The cryptic past of Madagascar: Human inhabitants of Madagascar are genetically unique | url=http://www.sanger.ac.uk/about/press/2005/050504.html | archiveurl = http://www.webcitation.org/5xKUHogZj |archivedate = May 6, 2011| accessdate = April 30, 2006 }}</ref> Other populations often intermixed with the existent population to a more limited degree or have sought to preserve a separate community from the majority Malagasy. |
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[[File:Urville-Viti-ship.jpg|thumb|An Austronesian [[outrigger canoe]]; Malagasy ''vahoaka'' "people" is from [[Proto-Malayo-Polynesian]] ''*va-waka'' "people of the canoe". The ''Vahoaka Ntaolo'', the first Austronesian ancestors of the Malagasy, probably used similar canoes to reach the great island from the [[Sunda Islands]]]] |
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By the [[Middle Ages]], over a dozen distinct ethnic identities had emerged on the island, typified by rule under a local chieftain. Some communities, such as the [[Sakalava people|Sakalava]], [[Merina people|Merina]] and [[Betsimisaraka people|Betsimisaraka]], were unified by leaders who established kingdoms, which gained wealth and power through commerce with Europeans and Arabs. Between the 16th and 18th centuries, pirate activity in the coastal areas of [[Madagascar]] was common. The Sakalava and Merina kingdoms in particular exploited European trade to strengthen the power of their kingdoms, trading Malagasy slaves for European firearms and other goods. Beginning in the early 19th century, the [[British Empire|British]] and [[French colonial empire|French]] competed for influence in Madagascar. |
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By the turn of the 19th century, King [[Andrianampoinimerina]] had reunited the highly populous [[Kingdom of Imerina]] in the central highlands, with its capital at [[Antananarivo]]. His son [[Radama I|Radama I the Great]] expanded its authority to the island's other polities and was the first Malagasy sovereign to be recognized by foreign states as the ruler of the greater [[Merina Kingdom]]. During the rule of [[Ranavalona I|Queen Ranavalona I]] (r. 1828–1861), the kingdom was further expanded to encompass most of the island. Madagascar's population is estimated to have declined by half from 5 million to 2.5 million between 1833 and 1839 from war, disease, slavery and other and violence. She also attempted to eradicate European and Christian influence in the country.<ref name=":1" /> |
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By the European Middle Ages, over a dozen predominant ethic identities had emerged on the island, typified by rule under a local chieftain. Among some communities, such as the Sakalava, Merina and Betsimisaraka, leaders seized the opportunity to unite these disparate communities and establish true kingdoms under their rule. These kingdoms increased their wealth and power through exchanges with European, Arab and other seafaring traders, whether they were legitimate vessels or pirates. Between the 16th and 18th centuries, pirate activity in the coastal areas of Madagascar was common and the celebrated free pirate colony of Libertatia was established on Saint Mary's Island, originally populated by local Malagasy. The Sakalava and Merina kingdoms in particular exploited European trade to strengthen the power of their kingdoms, trading Malagasy slaves in exchange for European firearms and other goods. By the turn of the 18th to 19th century, the highly populous Kingdom of Imerina, located in the central highlands with its capital at Antananarivo, began to exert its authority over the island's other polities and populations. A series of Merina monarchs ruled over the Kingdom of Madagascar throughout the 19th century and engaged in the process of modernization through close diplomatic ties to Britain that led to the establishment of European-style schools, government institutions and infrastructure. |
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[[Christianity in Madagascar|Christianity]] was made the state religion under Queen [[Ranavalona II]] (r. 1868–1883). In the 1880s, Britain recognised France's authority on the island. This led in 1890 to the [[Malagasy Protectorate]], which was however rejected by the Kingdom of Madagascar, which led to the two [[Franco-Hova Wars]] which ended with France capturing the capital in September 1895. Conflict continued in the [[Menalamba rebellion]] against French rule that was defeated in 1897. The monarchy was dissolved, and the queen was exiled. Following conquest, the French abolished [[slavery]] in 1896, freeing approximately 500,000 slaves.<ref>Shillington (2005), p. 878</ref> |
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From the 17th century through to the [[Scramble for Africa]], the [[British Empire|British]] and [[French colonial empires]] competed for influence in Madagascar. After a brief de facto protectorate period beginning in 1885 the island became a full formal French [[Malagasy Protectorate|protectorate]] in 1890, then a colony in 1896, and gained full independence from [[France]] in 1960 in the wake of [[decolonization]]. Under the leadership of President Philibert Tsiranana, Madagascar's First Republic (1960–1972) was established as a democratic system modeled on that of France. This period was characterized by continued economic and cultural dependence upon France, provoking resentment and sparking popular movements among farmers and students that ultimately ushered in the socialist Second Republic under Admiral Didier Ratsiraka (1975–1992) distinguished by economic isolationism and political alliances with pro-Soviet states. As Madagascar's economy quickly unraveled, standards of living declined dramatically and growing social unrest was increasingly met with violent repression on the part of the Ratsiraka government. Tension over popular dissatisfaction with Ratsiraka's rule was brought to a head when presidential guards were ordered to open fire on unarmed pro-democracy protesters in 1989. By 1992, free and fair multiparty elections were held, ushering in the democratic Third Republic (1992–2009). Under the new constitution, the Malagasy public elected President Albert Zafy, President Didier Ratsiraka, and most recently President Marc Ravalomanana. This latter was ousted in March 2009 by a popular movement under the leadership of Andry Rajoelina, then-mayor of Antananarivo, in what has been widely characterized as a coup d'état. Rajoelina has since ushered in a Fourth Republic and rules Madagascar as the President of the High Transitional Authority without recognition from the international community. |
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[[File:Migrations-autronesiennes.png|thumb|350px|Austronesians expansion map]] |
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[[File:Urville-Viti-ship.jpg|thumb|[[Outrigger canoe|''Waka''- Austronesian "outrigger canoe"]] which gave in Malagasy the name ''vahoaka''-"people", of proto-Malayo-Polynesian ''*va-waka'' - "the people of canoe" : the ''Vahoaka Ntaolo'', the first Austronesians ancestors of the Malagasy had probably used similar canoes to reach the great island from the [[Sunda islands]]]] |
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During [[French Madagascar|French rule]], Malagasy people were required to fulfill [[corvée]] labor on French-run plantations while access to education or skilled positions were limited, although basic services like schools and clinics were extended across the island. Several militant nationalist secret societies emerged in opposition to French rule, of which the most prominent was [[Vy Vato Sakelika]] formed in 1913. Many Malagasy were conscripted to fight for France during the [[World War I|First]] (1914–1918) and [[World War II|Second World War]]s (1939–1945), and during the latter Madagascar came under [[Vichy France|Vichy French]] control before being captured by the British in the [[Battle of Madagascar]] and returned to [[Free France|Free French]] control in 1942. In 1944, Madagascar became an overseas territory with representatives in the French [[National Assembly (France)|National Assembly]]. Militant nationalists launched a large [[Malagasy uprising|uprising]] in 1947 that was brutally suppressed by 1949. |
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== First inhabitants and Settlement (''ca'' 500 BC - 1500 AD) == |
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===A common Austronesian origin : The ''Vahoaka Ntaolo''=== |
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[[File:COLLECTIE TROPENMUSEUM Dajak mannen hakken een boom om Borneo. TMnr 60045266.jpg|thumb|''Vaγimba''- "Those of the forest" in proto-Southeast Barito (a former Austronesian language whose modern branch called "[[Barito languages]]" includes the [[Malagasy language|Malagasy]] and the languages spoken by the [[Dayak people|Dayaks]] peoples of the [[Barito]] river in [[South Kalimantan|Borneo]]: [[ma'anyan language|Ma'anyan]], Dusun Deyah, Dusun Malang, Dusun Witu, and Paku. (''Wikicommons Photo: Dayak of Borneo'')]] |
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Factual information about the peopling of Madagascar remains incomplete, but much recent multidisciplinary research and work in [[archaeology]],<ref>Burney ''et alii'' (2004)</ref> [[genetics]],<ref name="Hurles">Hurles ''et alii'' (2005)</ref> [[linguistics]],<ref name="Dahl">Dahl O. (1991)</ref><ref name="Adelaar">Adelaar, K.A. (2006)</ref><ref name="Simon">[http://books.google.com/books?id=MFsBYffWD48C&printsec=frontcover&dq=Simon+Pierre+Fitenin-drazana&hl=fr&ei=P1dvTpXpBc_P4QSR5tCXCQ&sa=X&oi=book_result&ct=result&resnum=1&ved=0CC0Q6AEwAA#v=onepage&q&f=false Simon P. (2006)]</ref> and [[history]]<ref name="Hurles">Staff (4 May 2005) [http://www.sanger.ac.uk/about/press/2005/050504.html "The cryptic past of Madagascar"] Wellcome Trust Sanger Institute, citing Hurles, M. E. ''et al'' (2005) "The dual origin of the Malagasy in Island Southeast Asia and East Africa: evidence from maternal and paternal lineages" ''American Journal of Human Genetics'' 76(5): pp. 894–901</ref><ref name="Verin">Verin (2000), p.20</ref><ref>{{Cite book | last = Diamond | first = Jared M. | title = Guns, germs, and steel: the fates of human societies | publisher = W. W. Norton & Company | location = New York | year = 1999 | page = 50 | isbn = 978-0-393-31755-8 |url = http://books.google.com/books?id=PWnWRFEGoeUC&printsec=frontcover#v=onepage&q&f=false |accessdate = March 21, 2011}}</ref><ref>Dahl, Otto Chr (1991) ''Migration from Kalimantan to Madagascar'' Institute for Comparative Research in Human Culture, Norwegian University Press, Oslo, Norway, ISBN 82-00-21140-1</ref> confirms that the Malagasy people were originally and overwhelmingly [[Austronesian]], native to the [[Sunda Islands|Indonesian archipelago]]. They probably arrived on the west coast of Madagascar with [[outrigger canoe]]s ([[Waka (canoe)|''waka'']]) at the beginning of our era or as much as 300 years sooner according to archaeologists,<ref>Burney et al, op.cit.</ref> and perhaps even earlier under certain geneticists' assumptions.<ref>Ricaut ''et al'', op.cit.</ref> These pioneers are known in the Malagasy oral tradition as the ''Ntaolo'', from [[Malayo-Polynesian languages|proto-Malayo-Polynesian]] ''*tau-ulu'', literally "first men", from ''*tau'', "man", and ''*ulu'', "head", "first", "origin", "beginning".<ref>[http://folk.uio.no/janengh/gassisk/M-P_Origin.pdf Randriamasimanana, "The Malayo-Polynesian Origin of Malagasy"]</ref> It is likely that those ancient people called themselves *''va-waka'', "the canoe people" from [[Proto-Polynesian language|proto-Malayo-Polynesian]] ''*va'', "people", and ''* waka''-"canoe". Today the term ''vahoaka'' means simply "people" in Malagasy. |
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The country gained full independence from France in 1960. Madagascar's [[Madagascar#Independent state|First Republic]] (1960–1972) was established as a democratic system modeled on that of France and led by President [[Philibert Tsiranana]]. Popular unrest led to the socialist [[Democratic Republic of Madagascar]] under Admiral [[Didier Ratsiraka]] (1975–1992) distinguished by [[Autarky|economic isolationism]] and [[Cold War|political alliances]] with pro-Soviet states. By 1992, free and fair multiparty elections were held, ushering in the democratic [[Third Republic of Madagascar|Third Republic]] (1992–2009). Under the new constitution, the Malagasy public elected successive presidents [[Albert Zafy]], [[Didier Ratsiraka]], and [[Marc Ravalomanana]]. This latter was ousted in the [[2009 Malagasy political crisis]] by a popular movement under the leadership of [[Andry Rajoelina]]. [[Malagasy general election, 2013|Elections were held]] on December 20, 2013, to elect a new president and return the country to constitutional governance. |
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[[File:Arman Manookian - 'Men in an Outrigger Canoe Headed for Shore', oil on canvas, c. 1929.jpg|thumb|''[[Vezo]]''-" Those of the coast "in Proto-Malayo-Javanese (Photo Wikicommons: Arman Manookian - 'Men in an Outrigger Canoe Headed for Shore', oil on Canneva, c. 1929)]] |
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The Southeast Asian origin of the first Malagasy people explains certain features common among the Malagasy, for instance, the [[epicanthic fold]] common among all Malagasy whether coastal or highlands, whether pale, dark or copper skinned. This original population (''vahoaka ntaolo'') can be called the "Proto-Malagasy" . They are the source of: |
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* the Malagasy language, common to the whole island, which shares many common [[root (linguistics)|roots]] with the [[Barito]] and [[Dayak languages|Dayak]] languages of [[South Kalimantan|South Borneo]], such as [[Ma'anyan language|Ma'anyan]],<ref>O. Dahl, op. cit., Adelaar, op. cit., Simon, op. cit.</ref> and belongs to the [[Austronesian]] language family, with closest affinity to the [[Malayo-Polynesian languages]] of the [[Bornean languages|Borneo]]. |
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* Malagasy cultural traditions shared with Austronesians of Taiwan, the Pacific Islands, Indonesia, New Zealand, and the Philippines including ancient customs, such as burying the dead within a canoe in the sea or in a lake, the cultivation of traditional Austronesian crops such as taro or''saonjo'', banana, coconut, and sugar cane, traditional architecture with a square house plan, music and musical instruments such as the ''Antsiva'' conch, the ''hazolahy'' drum, the ''atranatrana'' xylophone, ''[[sodina]]'' flute, or the ''[[valiha]]'' tube zither,<ref>schmidhoffer, A. (2005)</ref> and dance, including the "bird dance" found both in central and southern regions.<ref>According to the historian Edward Ralaimihoatra, who calls these Austronesians globally the ''Vazimba'', without distinguishing between the coastal Vezo, and the Vazimba of the forest. "brought into the island ''the main basis of the Malagasy language and techniques of original Austronesians outrigger canoes, flooded rice fields, squared timber boxes or branches built on stilts, built villages in the hills surrounded by ditches, etc.. This fund has received contributions resulting from human exchanges between the [[Africa]] and Madagascar, with navigation between the Arab coast of [[Saudi]], the [[East Africa]] and the [[Madagascar|Big Island]]''(Ralaimihoatra E., "The Primitives or Vazimba Malagasy", in''History of Madagascar'')</ref> |
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== First inhabitants and settlements (500 BCE–700 CE) == |
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As for the cause of the coming of these Austronesians, the history of the Indian Ocean from the early first millennium AD is still poorly understood. One can only assume that the island of Madagascar played an important role in trade, particularly that of [http://asiapacificuniverse.com/pkm/spiceroutes.htm spice trade] (especially the [[cinnamon]]) and [[timber]] between [[Southeast Asia]] and [[Middle East]], directly or through the African coast and Madagascar. |
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<!--Linked from [[Template:History of Madagascar]]--> |
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[[File:COLLECTIE TROPENMUSEUM De Batang Rawas bij Bingin-Telok TMnr 3219-14.jpg|thumb| An Austronesian Village showing several traditional houses, ''levu'' in proto-Malayo-Polynesian and in Malagasy). The ''vahoaka ntaolo'' villages of Madagascar were probably similar in the first millennium AD. This model is still currently present on every coast and in the remote inland areas and forests.]] |
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=== Archaeological evidence for date of first settlement === |
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===Settlement : the ''Vazimba'' and the ''Vezo''=== |
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[[File:COLLECTIE TROPENMUSEUM Dajak mannen hakken een boom om Borneo. TMnr 60045266.jpg|thumb|''Vaγimba''- "Those of the forest" in Proto–Southeast Barito, the reconstructed ancestor of the Southeast [[Barito languages]], which includes the languages spoken by the [[Dayak people|Dayak]] peoples of the [[Barito River]] in [[Borneo]] (''pictured'') ]] |
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The first concentrated population of human settlers emerged along the southeastern coast of the island, although the first landfall may have been made on the northern coast.<ref>{{Cite journal |last=Campbell |first=Gwyn |title=The Structure of Trade in Madagascar, 1750–1810 |journal=The International Journal of African Historical Studies |volume=26 |issue=1 |pages=111–148 |year=1993 |doi=10.2307/219188}}</ref> Upon arrival, early settlers practiced ''tavy'' (swidden, "[[Slash and burn|slash-and-burn]]" agriculture) to clear the virgin coastal [[rainforest]]s for the cultivation of their crops.<ref name = Kent>{{Cite book |last=Kent |first=Raymond |title=Early Kingdoms in Madagascar: 1500–1700 |publisher = Holt, Rinehart and Winston |location = New York |year=1970 |isbn = 0-03-084171-2, 9780030841712}}</ref> The first settlers encountered Madagascar's wealth of megafauna, including [[Subfossil lemur|giant lemurs]], [[elephant bird]]s, [[giant fossa]] and the [[Malagasy hippopotamus]], which have since become extinct due to hunting and habitat destruction.<ref>{{Cite journal | last = Virah-Sawmy | first = M. | coauthors = Willis, K.J.; Gillson, L. | title = Evidence for drought and forest declines during the recent megafaunal extinctions in Madagascar | journal = Journal of Biogeography | volume = 37 | pages = 506–519 | year = 2010 | doi=10.1111/j.1365-2699.2009.02203.x}}</ref> |
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The earliest unambiguous evidence of continuous human presence in Madagascar was found at Andavakoera and dates to 490 CE,<ref>'The archaeological evidence for the earliest human presence in Madagascar comes from Andavakoera near Diego Suarez and is dated to AD420 (AD250-590, 2SDs) (Dewar & Wright 1996).</ref> and there is no archaeological evidence for human occupation in the highlands until around 1200. However, there is scattered evidence for much earlier human visits. |
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By 600 CE groups of these early settlers had moved inland and began clearing the forests of the [[Imerina|central Highlands]] where they particularly planted [[taro]] (''saonjo'') and probably [[rice]] (''vary''). These Vahoaka Ntaolo, hunters-gatherers and farmers, who decided to settle "in the forest", especially in the forests of the central highlands are known by the tradition<ref name="Callet"> |
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{{cite book |
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| last = Callet |
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| first = François |
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| year = 1908 (1972) |
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| title = Tantara ny andriana eto Madagasikara (histoire des rois) |
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| publisher = Imprimerie catholique |
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| location = Antananarivo }} |
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</ref> |
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as the [[Vazimba]] (from ''* ba /va- yimba''- " those of the forest ", from ''*yimba'' -" forest "in proto Southeast Barito, today ''barimba'' or ''orang rimba'' in Malay<ref>Simon, Pierre (2006), [http://books.google.com/books?id=MFsBYffWD48C&printsec=frontcover&dq=Simon+Pierre+Fitenin-drazana&hl=fr&ei=P1dvTpXpBc_P4QSR5tCXCQ&sa=X&oi=book_result&ct=result&resnum=1&ved=0CC0Q6AEwAA#v=onepage&q=vazimba&f=false ''La langue des ancêtres. Une périodisation du malgache de l’origine au XVIe siècle''], Paris, L’Harmattan., p. 245</ref>). Rafandrana, an ancestor of the [[Merina]] royal dynasty, for example, is known to have been a Vazimba. [[Rafohy]] and [[Rangita]], the two founding queens of the Merina royalty, were also called Vazimbas.<ref name="Callet"/> |
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[[File:TaroAKL.jpg|thumb| The [[taro]] (''saonjo'' in malagasy) is, according to an old Malagasy proverb, "the elder of the rice" (''Ny saonjo no zokin'ny vary''), and was also a staple diet for all the ancient Austronesians]] |
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On the other side, the fishermen who, from the beginning, remained on the Southwestern coast (probably the coasts of the first landing) were, according to the linguists, probably originally called the ''[[Vezo]]'' (from ''*ba/va/ be/ve-jau'' – "those of the coast", borrowed from Proto-Malayo-Javanese, today ''veju'' in Bugis, ''bejau'' in Malay, and ''bajo'' in Javanese<ref name="Simon"/>), which today is still the name of a Southwestern tribe. |
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[[File:Suling.jpg| thumb | The flute [[suling]] Indonesian cousin of the [[sodina]]]] |
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A point is still debated among the researchers community about the ''Vazimba'' : as it is an Austronesian qualifier designating "forest dwellers" in general (including the Austronesians Vahoaka Ntaolo themselves settled in the forests ), it can not be excluded that other hominids ''vazimba'' natives like [[Flores Man]], for example, have inhabited the forests of Madagascar dozens-even hundreds-of thousands of years before the arrival of the Austronesians Vahoaka Ntaolo. Some may have even existed at the arrival of these Austronesians in the first millennium BC. This could explain the myth of the "little people/dwarfs primary forest aborigens" that the Vahoaka Ntaolo - ancestor of the majority of present Malagasys - have met<ref name="Callet"/> (and either integrated or wiped out) when they arrived. The compelling evidence behind this myth is still missing today. Only archeology and genetics can bring. It is, finally, not excluded that the myth of these "little/dwarf men ''vazimba'' " was led by the Austronesian from [[Sunda Islands]] where they lived before, in which case this myth could actually relate to the Flores hominid type or, more probably, the [[Negrito]]s ([[Orang Asli]] in Malay). The latter have in fact lived in the forests of the Sunda Islands before before the arrival of Austronesians and are there considered to be the aboriginal peoples. We know, for example, that the malagasy myth of the ogre ''Trimo be'' – "eater of children" is a story brought by the Austronesians and in fact is about the tiger (from * (t) rimau, "tiger" in proto-MP) who lives in the forests of the Sunda Islands. The myth of the "dwarfs" ''vazimba'' could have been brought in a similar trip. |
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In 2009, archaeological excavations at Christmas River (south-central Madagascar) by Pat Wright and James Hansford located a purported elephant bird kill site, with bones showing human cut marks. These were dated to 8,500 BCE, but as yet there is no indication as to the identity of the hunters.<ref>{{cite news|date=September 10, 2018|title=Ancient bird bones redate human activity in Madagascar by 6,000 years|url=https://www.zsl.org/science/news/ancient-bird-bones-redate-human-activity-in-madagascar-by-6000-years|newspaper=Zoological Society of London (ZSL)}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|date=September 12, 2018|title=Ancient bird bones redate human activity in Madagascar by 6,000 years|url=https://phys.org/news/2018-09-ancient-bird-bones-redate-human.html|website=Phys.org}}</ref> [[Archaeology|Archaeological]] finds such as cut marks on bones found in the northwest and stone tools in the northeast indicate that Madagascar was visited by foragers around 2000 BCE.<ref>{{cite journal | last1 = Gommery | first1 = D. | last2 = Ramanivosoa | first2 = B. | last3 = Faure | first3 = M. | last4 = Guérin | first4 = C. | last5 = Kerloc'h | first5 = P. | last6 = Sénégas | first6 = F. | last7 = Randrianantenaina | first7 = H. | title = Oldest evidence of human activities in Madagascar on subfossil hippopotamus bones from Anjohibe (Mahajanga Province) | journal = Comptes Rendus Palevol | volume = 10 | issue = 4 | year = 2011 | pages = 271–278 | doi = 10.1016/j.crpv.2011.01.006}}</ref><ref>{{cite journal | last1 = Dewar | first1 = R. E. | last2 = Radimilahy | first2 = C. | last3 = Wright | first3 = H. T. | last4 = Jacobs | first4 = Z. | last5 = Kelly | first5 = G. O. | last6 = Berna | first6 = F. | title = Stone tools and foraging in northern Madagascar challenge Holocene extinction models | journal = Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | volume = 110 | issue = 31 | year = 2013 | pages = 12583–12588 | doi = 10.1073/pnas.1306100110 | pmid=23858456 | pmc=3732966| bibcode = 2013PNAS..11012583D | doi-access = free }}</ref> |
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After the arrival of the Middle Age newcomers (see below), as growing population density necessitated higher crop yields, irrigated rice paddies emerged in [[Betsileo]] country by 1600 and were complemented with terraced paddies throughout [[Imerina]] a century later.<ref>Campbell (1993), p.116</ref> [[Zebu]] were introduced around 1000 CE by [[Bantu languages|Bantu]]-speaking East African migrants (see below) who maintained large herds. The rising intensity of land cultivation and the ever-increasing demand for zebu pasturage in the central highlands had largely transformed the region from a forest ecosystem to barren grassland by the 17th century.<ref>{{Cite journal |last=Gade |first=Daniel |title=Deforestation and its effects in Highland Madagascar |journal=Mountain Research and Development |volume=16 |issue=2 |pages=101–116 |year=1996 |doi=10.2307/3674005}}</ref> |
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There is potential evidence in the form of a cutmarked subfossil [[lemur]] bone from a palaeontological site, Taolambiby, in the southwest. One date was obtained, calibrated 530 to 300 BC (Godfrey & Jungers 2003). The cutmarking looks plausible, but there is a potential problem of old carbon from the limestone landscape compromising the date, and there are no associated artifacts or archaeological sites in the vicinity. Nearly contemporaneous potential evidence comes from [[cannabis]] or [[humulus]] pollen which occurs in a pollen column from the central highlands at an interpolated date of c. 2200 [[Before Present]] (BP).<ref>Burney 1987</ref> There is a hypothesis that cannabis may have reached Africa 3000 years ago. |
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== Early history (ca 700-1500) : traders and explorers visits, new immigrations and birth of neo-Vezo and Neo-Vazimba clans == |
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[[Necho II]]'s Phoenician expedition c. 595 BCE circumnavigated Africa but did not see Madagascar when passing through the [[Mozambique Channel]], as it stayed within sight of the African mainland. The island was likely uninhabited.<ref name="ley196608">{{Cite magazine|last=Ley|first=Willy|date=August 1966|title=Scherazade's Island|url=https://archive.org/stream/Galaxy_v24n06_1966-08#page/n45/mode/2up|department=For Your Information|magazine=Galaxy Science Fiction|pages=45–55}}</ref> |
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By the mid-first millennium (ca 700) until about 1500, the inner Vazimbas as much as the coastal Vezos clans welcome new visitors and/or immigrants. These goods and/or slave traders from the Middle East (Shirazi Persians, Omanites Arabs, Arabized Jews accompanied with East-Africans Bantus), and from Asia (Gujarat Indians, Malays, Javanese, Bugis) were sometimes integrated within the coastal Vezos and the inner Vazimbas clans<ref>Larson, 2000</ref><ref name="Larson"> |
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{{cite book |
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| last = Larson |
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| first = Pier M. |
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| year = 2000 |
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| title = History and Memory in the Age of Enslavement. Becoming Merina in Highland Madagascar, 1770-1822 |
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| publisher = Social History of Africa Series. Portsmouth, New Hampshire: Heinemann, 414 p. |
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| isbn = 0-325-00217-7 |
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}} |
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</ref> |
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Finally, a cutmarked pygmy hippo bone from Ambolisatra has been dated and calibrated to between 60 BC and 130 AD (2 SDs), but it is from a coastal swamp without indications of settlement in a heavily karstic region. Moreover, a similar bone from the same collection from a nearby site gave two widely divergent dates of 2020 and 3495 BC (MacPhee & Burney 1991). Transient visits to Madagascar that did not result in enduring settlement cannot be ruled out, and may have left some traces.<ref>Peter Forster, Shuichi Matsumutra, Matthieu Vizuete-Forster, Petya Belinda Blumbach & Robert Dewar (2008) "The Genetic Prehistory of Madagascar's Female Asian Lineages", In: {{cite book|last1=Matsumura|first1=Shūichi|last2=Forster|first2=Peter|last3=Renfrew|first3=Colin|author-link3=Colin Renfrew|title=Simulations, Genetics and Human Prehistory|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=IR3bAAAAMAAJ|year=2008|publisher=McDonald Institute for Archaeological Research|isbn=978-1-902937-45-8}}, pp71-72</ref> |
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===Omani Arabs and Shirazi Persians (from the 7th century)=== |
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The written history of Madagascar begins in the 7th century when Omani [[Arab]]s and Shirazi [[Persian people|Persians]] established trading posts along the northwest coast and introduced Islam, the Arabic script (used to transcribe the Malagasy language in a form of writing known as ''[[sorabe]]''), Arab astrology and other cultural elements.<ref name = "LOC">{{Cite web | last = Metz | first = Helen Chapin |year = 1994 | title = Library of Congress Country Studies: Madagascar (Education) | url=http://memory.loc.gov/cgi-bin/query/r?frd/cstdy:@field%28DOCID+mg0030%29 | accessdate = February 1, 2011|archiveurl = http://www.webcitation.org/5wBtCIo0q |archivedate = February 1, 2011}}</ref> During this early period, Madagascar served as an important transoceanic trading port for the east African coast that gave Africa a trade route to the [[Silk Road]] and served simultaneously as a port for incoming ships. There is evidence that [[Bantu peoples|Bantu]] or [[Swahili people|Swahili]] sailors or traders may have begun sailing to the western shores of Madagascar as early as around the 6th and 7th century.<ref name="Historical Archaeology">[http://books.google.com/books?id=zRcFQ_gBNI8C&pg=PA571&lpg=PA571&dq=history+of+Madagascar+Swahili&source=bl&ots=SQVBprLXhe&sig=pg76E-VAZshXpCItSE9JXFiCBMk&hl=en&sa=X&ei=eTs7T4SOFOHc0QH1jvGaCw&ved=0CCcQ6AEwAQ#v=onepage&q=history%20of%20Madagascar%20Swahili&f=false International Handbook of Historical Archaeology. By Teresita Majewski, David Gaimster. pg. 571], (2009) Social Sciences, ''"East Africa, Madgascar and the Horn"'', accessed February 15, 2012.</ref> |
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=== A common Austronesian origin: The ''Vahoaka Ntaolo'' === |
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According to the traditions of some Malagasy peoples, the first Bantus and Arabs to settle in Madagascar came as [[refugee]]s from the [[Succession to Muhammad|civil wars]] that followed the death of [[Mohammed]] in 632.<ref name="ReferenceA">Sigmund Edland, Tantaran’ny Fiangonana Loterana Malagasy</ref> |
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Factual information about the peopling of Madagascar remains incomplete, but much recent multidisciplinary research and work in [[archaeology]],<ref>Burney ''et alii'' (2004)</ref> [[genetics]],<ref>Hurles ''et alii'' (2005)</ref> [[linguistics]],<ref name="Dahl">Dahl O. (1991)</ref><ref name="Adelaar">Adelaar, K.A. (2006)</ref><ref name="Simon">{{cite book|last=Simon|first=Pierre R.|title=Fitenin-drazana|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=MFsBYffWD48C|year=2006|publisher=L'Harmattan|isbn=978-2-296-01108-3}}</ref> and history<ref>Staff (May 4, 2005) [http://www.sanger.ac.uk/about/press/2005/050504.html "The cryptic past of Madagascar"] Wellcome Trust Sanger Institute, citing {{cite journal|last1=Hurles|first1=Matthew E.|last2=Sykes|first2=Bryan C.|last3=Jobling|first3=Mark A.|last4=Forster|first4=Peter|title=The Dual Origin of the Malagasy in Island Southeast Asia and East Africa: Evidence from Maternal and Paternal Lineages|journal=The American Journal of Human Genetics|date=May 2005|volume=76|issue=5|pages=894–901|doi=10.1086/430051|pmid=15793703|pmc=1199379}}</ref><ref name="Verin">Verin (2000), p.20</ref><ref>{{cite book | last = Diamond | first = Jared M. | title = Guns, germs, and steel: the fates of human societies | publisher = W. W. Norton & Company | location = New York | year = 1999 | page = [https://archive.org/details/gunsgermssteel00diam/page/50 50] | isbn = 978-0-393-31755-8 |url = https://archive.org/details/gunsgermssteel00diam | url-access = registration |access-date = March 21, 2011}}</ref><ref>{{cite book|last=Dahl |first=Otto Chr |year=1991 |title=Migration from Kalimantan to Madagascar |publisher=Institute for Comparative Research in Human Culture, Norwegian University Press |location= Oslo, Norway |isbn=82-00-21140-1}}</ref> confirms that the Malagasy people were originally and overwhelmingly [[Austronesian peoples]] native to the [[Sunda Islands]]. They probably arrived on the west coast of Madagascar with [[outrigger canoe]]s ([[Waka (canoe)|''waka'']]) at the beginning of our era or as much as 300 years sooner according to archaeologists,<ref>Burney et al, op. cit.</ref> and perhaps even earlier under certain geneticists' assumptions.<ref>Ricaut ''et al'', op. cit.</ref> On the basis of plant cultigens, Blench proposed the migrations occurred "at the earliest century BCE".<ref>Blench, Roger. “The Ethnographic Evidence for Long-distance Contacts Between Oceania and East Africa” In ''The Indian Ocean in Antiquity'', edited by Julian Reade, pp. 417–38. London: Kegan Paul/British Museum 1996 pp. 417–38.</ref>{{Rp|432}} Archaeological work of Ardika and Bellwood suggests migration between 500 and 200 BCE.<ref>I. W. Ardika & P. Bellwood, “Sembiran: The Beginnings of Indian Contact with Bali”, Antiquity 65 (1991): 221–32.</ref><ref>I. W. Ardika, P. Bellwood, I. M. Sutaba & K. C. Yuliati, “Sembiran and the First Indian Contacts with Bali: An Update”, Antiquity 71(1997): 193–95.</ref> |
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Beginning in the 10th or 11th century, [[Arabic]] and [[Zanzibari]] [[slave traders|slave-traders]] worked their way down the east coast of Africa in their [[dhow]]s and established settlements on the west coast of Madagascar. Notably they included the Zafiraminia, traditional ancestors of the [[Antemoro]], [[Antanosy]] and other east-coast ethnicities. The last wave of Arab immigrants, the Antalaotra, immigrated from eastern African colonies. They settled the north-west of the island ([[Majunga]] area) and introduced, for the first time, [[Islam in Madagascar|Islam to Madagascar]].<ref name="ReferenceA"/> |
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Arab immigrants, though few in number compared to the native Austronesians and Bantus, nevertheless left a lasting impression. The Malagasy names for seasons, months, days, and coins in certain regions come from Arabic origins, as do cultural features such as the practice of [[circumcision]], the communal grain-pool, and different forms of salutation (such as "salama"-"hello" in malagasy). |
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The Borobudur Ship Expedition in 2003–2004 affirmed scholars' ideas that ships from ancient Indonesia could have reached Madagascar and the west African coast for trade from the 8th century and after. [[Samudra Raksa|A traditional Borobudur ship]] with outriggers was reconstructed and sailed in this expedition from [[Jakarta]] to Madagascar and [[Ghana]].<ref>{{cite book|last=Pareanom|first=Yusi Avianto|title=Cinnamon Route: The Samudraraksa Borobudur Expedition|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=queuAAAACAAJ|year=2005|publisher=Taman Wisata Candi Borobudur, Prambanan & Ratu Boko|isbn=978-979-8083-58-7}}</ref> As for the ancient route, one possibility is that Indonesian Austronesians came directly across the Indian Ocean from [[Java]] to Madagascar. It is likely that they went through the [[Maldives]] where evidence of old Indonesian boat design and fishing technology persists until the present.<ref>P. Y. Manguin. ''Pre-modern Southeast Asian Shipping in the Indian Ocean: The Maldive Connection''. ‘New Directions in Maritime History Conference’ Fremantle. December 1993.</ref> The [[Malagasy language]] originated from the Southeast [[Barito languages|Barito language]], and [[Ma'anyan language]] is its closest relative, with numerous Malay and Javanese loanwords.<ref>Otto Chr. Dahl, ''Malgache et Maanjan: une comparaison linguistique'', Egede-Instituttet Avhandlinger, no. 3 (Oslo: Egede-Instituttet, 1951), p. 13.</ref><ref>There are also some Sulawesi loanwords, which Adelaar attributes to contact prior to the migration to Madagascar: See K. Alexander Adelaar, “The Indonesian Migrations to Madagascar: Making Sense of the Multidisciplinary Evidence”, in Truman Simanjuntak, Ingrid Harriet Eileen Pojoh and Muhammad Hisyam (eds.), ''Austronesian Diaspora and the Ethnogeneses of People in Indonesian Archipelago'', (Jakarta: Indonesian Institute of Sciences, 2006), pp. 8–9.</ref> It is known that [[Ma'anyan people]] were brought as laborers and slaves by [[Malays (ethnic group)|Malay]] and [[Javanese people]] in their trading fleets, which reached Madagascar by ca. 50–500 AD.<ref name="Dewar19932">{{cite journal|last1=Dewar|first1=Robert E.|last2=Wright|first2=Henry T.|date=1993|title=The culture history of Madagascar|journal=Journal of World Prehistory|volume=7|issue=4|pages=417–466|doi=10.1007/bf00997802|hdl-access=free|hdl=2027.42/45256|s2cid=21753825}}</ref><ref name="Burney20042">{{cite journal|vauthors=Burney DA, Burney LP, Godfrey LR, Jungers WL, Goodman SM, Wright HT, Jull AJ|date=August 2004|title=A chronology for late prehistoric Madagascar|journal=Journal of Human Evolution|volume=47|issue=1–2|pages=25–63|doi=10.1016/j.jhevol.2004.05.005|pmid=15288523}}</ref> These pioneers are known in the Malagasy oral tradition as the ''Ntaolo'', from [[Proto-Malayo-Polynesian]] ''*tau-ulu'', literally 'first men', from ''*tau'', 'man', and ''*ulu'', 'head; first; origin, beginning.<ref>[http://folk.uio.no/janengh/gassisk/M-P_Origin.pdf Randriamasimanana, "The Malayo-Polynesian Origin of Malagasy"]</ref> It is likely that those ancient people called themselves *''va-waka'', "the canoe people" from Proto-Malayo-Polynesian ''*va'', 'people', and ''*waka'' 'canoe'. Today the term {{lang|mg|vahoaka}} means 'people' in Malagasy. |
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===Neo-Austronesians : Malays, Javanese, Bugis, and Orang Laut (from the 8th century)=== |
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[[File:COLLECTIE TROPENMUSEUM Kleurenlitho getiteld Katafalk van het hoofd van Longpoetih TMnr 5795-29.jpg|thumb|Canoe-sarcophagus of the Dayak: a burial that recalls the Malagasy tradition that former Ntaolo Vazimba Vand ezo buried their dead in canoe-sarcophagi in the sea or in a lake]] |
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According to oral tradition,<ref>Ramilison E.,''Andriantomara-Andriamamilazabe: loharanon'ny andriana nanjaka teto Imerina'', Antananarivo, Lutheran Printing</ref> new Austronesian clans ([[Ethnic Malays|Malays]], [[Javanese (people)|Javanese]], [[Bugis]], and [[Orang Laut]]),<ref>Adelaar, KA (2006) [http://www.santafe.edu/events/workshops/images/6/6d/IndonesianMigrations.pdf "The Indonesian migrations to Madagascar:''''''HI'''''' Making sense of the Multidisciplinary evidence "])</ref> historically referred to in general, regardless of their native island, as the "[[Hova (Madagascar)|Hova]]"<ref name="Callet"/> (from Old Bugis ''uwa'', "commoner") landed in the North West and East coast of the island. Linguists' observations of Old Malay (sanscritised), Old Javanese (sanscritised) and Old Bugis borrowings in the initial proto-SEB languages, indicate that the first Hova waves came probably in the 8th century at the earliest.<ref>O. Dahl, op. cit. ; Adelaar K.A op. cit.</ref> |
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[[File:Arman Manookian - 'Men in an Outrigger Canoe Headed for Shore', oil on canvas, c. 1929.jpg|thumb|''Men in an Outrigger Canoe Headed for Shore'', an oil painting by Arman Manookian depicting the [[Vezo people]], {{circa|1929}}]] |
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The Hova were probably derived from [[Sriwijaya|Indonesian thalassocracies]]. Their leaders were known as the ''diana'' in the Southeast and ''[[andriana]]'' or ''raondriana'' in the Center and the West<ref name="Callet"/><ref>Ramilison, 1951</ref><ref name="Ramilison"> |
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{{cite book |
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The Southeast Asian origin of the first Malagasy people explains certain features common among the Malagasy, for instance, the [[epicanthic fold]] common among all Malagasy whether coastal or highlands, whether pale, dark or copper skinned. This original population (''vahoaka ntaolo'') can be called the "Proto-Malagasy". They are the source of: |
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| last = Ramilison |
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* the Malagasy language, common to the whole island, which shares many common [[root (linguistics)|roots]] with the [[Austronesian languages|Austronesian]] languages of [[Barito languages|Barito]] subgroup, which originated in [[South Kalimantan]], such as [[Ma'anyan language|Ma'anyan]].<ref>O. Dahl, op. cit., Adelaar, op. cit., Simon, op. cit.</ref> |
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| first = Emmanuel |
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* Malagasy cultural traditions shared with Austronesians of [[Taiwanese aborigines|Taiwan]], the Pacific Islands, Indonesia, New Zealand, and the Philippines including ancient customs, such as burying the dead within a canoe in the sea or in a lake, the cultivation of traditional Austronesian crops such as taro or {{lang|mg|saonjo}}, banana, coconut, and sugar cane, traditional architecture with a square house plan, music and musical instruments such as the {{lang|mg|antsiva}} conch, the {{lang|mg|hazolahy}} drum, the {{lang|mg|atranatrana}} xylophone, {{lang|mg|[[sodina]]}} flute, or the {{lang|mg|[[valiha]]}} [[tube zither]],<ref>schmidhoffer, A. (2005)</ref> and dance, including the "bird dance" found both in central and southern regions.<ref>This is according to historian Edward Ralaimihoatra, who calls these Austronesians globally the ''Vazimba'', without distinguishing between the coastal Vezo, and the Vazimba of the forest. "[T]he main basis of the Malagasy language and techniques of Austronesian origins such as outrigger canoes, flooded rice fields, squared timber boxes or branches built on stilts, villages in the hills surrounded by ditches, etc. This fund has received contributions resulting from human exchanges between Africa and Madagascar, with navigation between the Arab coast of [[Arabian Peninsula|Saudi]], East Africa, and the Big Island." Ralaimihoatra E., "The Primitives or Vazimba Malagasy", in ''History of Madagascar'')</ref> |
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| year = 1951 |
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| title = Ny loharanon'ny andriana nanjaka teto Imerina : Andriantomara-Andriamamilazabe |
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As for the cause of the coming of these Austronesians, the history of the Indian Ocean from the early first millennium CE is still poorly understood. Madagascar may have played an important role in the trade of spices (especially [[cinnamon]]) and timber between Southeast Asia and the Middle East, directly or through the African coast and Madagascar.{{citation needed|date=October 2020}} |
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| publisher = Imprimerie Ankehitriny |
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}}</ref> |
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[[File:COLLECTIE TROPENMUSEUM De Batang Rawas bij Bingin-Telok TMnr 3219-14.jpg|thumb|A Sumatran village showing several traditional houses (Malagasy ''levu''). The ''vahoaka ntaolo'' villages of Madagascar were probably similar in the first millennium AD. This model is still currently present on every coast and in the remote inland areas and forests.]] |
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(from ''(ra)-hadi-an'', "lord" or "master" in Old Javanese,<ref name="Adelaar"/> modern Javanese [[Priyayi#Titles|''raden'']], also found in the Bugis noble title [[:fr:Titres de noblesse indonésiens#Bugis.5B1.5D|''andi'']]). They for the most part allied with Vazimba clans<ref>Ravelojaona ''et alii'' 1937</ref><ref name="Ravelojaona"> |
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{{cite book |
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===''Vazimba'' and ''Vezo''=== |
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| last = Ravelojaona |
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The first known concentrated population of human settlers emerged along the southeastern coast of the island, although the first landfall may have been made on the northern coast.<ref name=":1">{{cite journal |last=Campbell |first=Gwyn |title=The Structure of Trade in Madagascar, 1750–1810 |journal=The International Journal of African Historical Studies |volume=26 |issue=1 |pages=111–148 |year=1993 |doi=10.2307/219188|jstor=219188 }}</ref> Upon arrival, early settlers practiced ''tavy'' ([[slash-and-burn]] agriculture) to clear the virgin coastal [[rainforest]]s for the cultivation of their crops.<ref name = Kent>{{cite book |last=Kent |first=Raymond |title=Early Kingdoms in Madagascar: 1500–1700 |publisher = Holt, Rinehart and Winston |location = New York |year=1970 |isbn = 9780030841712}}</ref> The first settlers encountered Madagascar's wealth of megafauna, including [[Subfossil lemur|giant lemurs]], [[elephant bird]]s, [[Cryptoprocta spelea|giant fossa]] and the [[Malagasy hippopotamus]], which have since become extinct due to hunting and [[habitat destruction]].<ref>{{cite journal | last = Virah-Sawmy | first = M. |author2=Willis, K.J. |author3=Gillson, L. | title = Evidence for drought and forest declines during the recent megafaunal extinctions in Madagascar | journal = Journal of Biogeography | volume = 37 | pages = 506–519 | year = 2010 | doi=10.1111/j.1365-2699.2009.02203.x | issue = 3| bibcode = 2010JBiog..37..506V | s2cid = 84382916 }}</ref> |
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| first = Randzavola, Rajaonah G. |
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| year = 1937 |
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By 600, groups of these early settlers had moved inland and began clearing the forests of the central highlands (''Imerina''), where they particularly planted [[taro]] (''saonjo'') and probably rice (''vary''). These ''Vahoaka Ntaolo'', hunters-gatherers and farmers, who decided to settle "in the forest", especially in the forests of the central highlands are known by the tradition<ref name="Callet">{{cite book |last=Callet |first=François |year=1972 |orig-year=1908 |title=Tantara ny andriana eto Madagasikara (histoire des rois) |publisher=Imprimerie catholique |location=Antananarivo}}</ref> as the [[Vazimba]] (from ''*ba/va-yimba-'' 'those of the forest', from ''*yimba-'' 'forest' in Proto–Southeast Barito, today ''barimba'' or ''orang rimba'' in Malay<ref>Simon, Pierre (2006), [https://books.google.com/books?id=MFsBYffWD48C&q=vazimba ''La langue des ancêtres. Une périodisation du malgache de l’origine au XVIe siècle''], Paris, L’Harmattan., p. 245</ref>). Rafandrana, an ancestor of the [[Merina people|Merina]] royal dynasty, for example, is known to have been a Vazimba. [[Rafohy]] and [[Rangita]], the two founding queens of the Merina royalty, were also called Vazimbas.<ref name="Callet" /> |
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| title = Firaketana ny Fiteny sy ny Zavatra Malagasy |
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| publisher = Antananarivo:Imprimerie Tanananarivienne |
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[[File:TaroAKL.jpg|thumb|The [[taro]] (''saonjo'' in Malagasy) is, according to an old Malagasy proverb, "the elder of the rice" (''Ny saonjo no zokin'ny vary''), and was also a staple diet for the proto-Austronesians]] |
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}}: |
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</ref> |
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On the other side, the fishermen who, from the beginning, remained on the southwestern coast (probably the coasts of the first landing) were, according to the linguists, probably originally called the ''[[Vezo]]'' (from ''*ba/va/be/ve-jau'' – "those of the coast", borrowed from Proto-Malayo-Javanese, today ''veju'' in Bugis, ''bejau'' in Malay, and ''bajo'' in Javanese<ref name="Simon" />), which today is still the name of a Southwestern tribe. |
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[[File:Suling.jpg|thumb|The [[suling]] is an Indonesian cousin of the [[sodina]]]] |
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After the arrival of the newcomers (see below), as growing population density necessitated higher crop yields, irrigated rice paddies emerged in [[Betsileo people|Betsileo]] country by 1600 and were complemented with terraced paddies throughout the central highlands a century later.<ref>Campbell (1993), p.116</ref> [[Zebu]] were introduced around 1000 by [[Bantu languages|Bantu-speaking]] migrants from the [[African Great Lakes]] region (see below), who maintained large herds. The rising intensity of land cultivation and the ever-increasing demand for zebu pasturage in the central highlands had largely transformed the region from a forest ecosystem to barren grassland by the 17th century.<ref name="Gade 1996" /> |
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==Traders, explorers, and immigration (700–1500)== |
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<!--Linked from [[Template:History of Madagascar]]--> |
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By the mid-first millennium (ca 700) until about 1500, the inner Vazimbas as much as the coastal Vezos clans welcomed new visitors or immigrants. These goods and/or slave traders came from the Middle East (Shirazi Persians, Omani Arabs, Arab Jews), Africa (Swahilis), and from Asia ([[Gujarati people|Gujaratis]], Malays, Javanese, Bugis). They were sometimes integrated within the coastal Vezos and the inner Vazimbas clans.<ref name="Larson">{{cite book | last = Larson | first = Pier M. | year = 2000 | title = History and Memory in the Age of Enslavement. Becoming Merina in Highland Madagascar, 1770–1822 | publisher = Social History of Africa Series. Portsmouth, New Hampshire: Heinemann, 414 p. | isbn = 978-0-325-00217-0}}</ref> |
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===Omani Arabs (from the 7th century)=== |
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The written history of Madagascar begins in the 7th century when [[Omanis]] established trading posts along the northwest coast and introduced Islam, the Arabic script (used to transcribe the Malagasy language in a form of writing known as the [[sorabe alphabet]]), Arab astrology and other cultural elements.<ref name="LOC">{{cite web |last=Metz |first=Helen Chapin |author-link=Helen Chapin Metz |year=1994 |title=Library of Congress Country Studies: Madagascar (Education) |url=http://memory.loc.gov/cgi-bin/query/r?frd/cstdy:@field%28DOCID+mg0030%29 |access-date=February 1, 2011 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20190327073937/http://memory.loc.gov/cgi-bin/query/r?frd%2Fcstdy%3A%40field%28DOCID+mg0030%29 |archive-date=March 27, 2019 |url-status=dead }}</ref> During this early period, Madagascar served as an important transoceanic trading port for the East African coast that gave Africa a trade route to the [[Silk Road]] and served simultaneously as a port for incoming ships. There is evidence that [[Bantu peoples|Bantu]] or [[Swahili people|Swahili]] sailors or traders may have begun sailing to the western shores of Madagascar as early as around the 6th and 7th century.<ref name="Historical Archaeology">{{cite book|last1=Majewski|first1=Teresita|last2=Gaimster|first2=David |author-link2=David Gaimster |title=International Handbook of Historical Archaeology|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=zRcFQ_gBNI8C&pg=PA571|year=2009|publisher=Springer Science & Business Media|isbn=978-0-387-72071-5}}</ref> |
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According to the traditions of some Malagasy peoples, the first Bantus and Arabs to settle in Madagascar came as [[refugee]]s from the [[Ridda Wars|civil wars]] that followed the death of [[Muhammad]] in 632.<ref name="ReferenceA">Sigmund Edland, Tantaran’ny Fiangonana Loterana Malagasy</ref> |
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Beginning in the 10th or 11th century, [[Arabic]] and [[Zanzibar]]i [[History of slavery|slavers]] worked their way down the [[Swahili coast]] in their [[dhow]]s and established settlements on the west coast of Madagascar. Notably they included the [[Zafiraminia]], traditional ancestors of the [[Antemoro people|Antemoro]], [[Antanosy people|Antanosy]] and other east coast ethnicities. The last wave of Arab immigrants, the Antalaotra, immigrated from Swahili colonies. They settled the northwest of the island (the [[Mahajanga]] area) and introduced, for the first time, [[Islam in Madagascar|Islam to Madagascar]].<ref name="ReferenceA" /> |
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Arab immigrants, though few in number compared to the native Austronesians and Bantus, nevertheless left a lasting impression. The Malagasy names for seasons, months, days, and coins in certain regions come from Arabic origins,<ref name="HISTORY OF MADAGASCAR">{{Cite web|title=HISTORY OF MADAGASCAR|url=http://www.historyworld.net/wrldhis/plaintexthistories.asp?historyid=ad26|website=www.historyworld.net|access-date=2020-05-27}}</ref><ref>{{Cite journal|last=Dahle|first=L.|date=1876|title=THE INFLUENCE OF THE ARABS ON THE MALAGASY LANGUAGE|url=https://play.google.com/store/books/details?id=wFgcAAAAMAAJ&rdid=book-wFgcAAAAMAAJ&rdot=1|journal=The Antananarvio Annual and Madagascar Magazine|volume=1|pages=75–91|via=Google Books}}</ref> as do cultural features such as the practice of [[circumcision]], the communal grain-pool, and different forms of salutation (such as ''[[As-salamu alaykum|salama]]''). |
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===Neo-Austronesians: Malays, Javanese, Bugis, and Orang Laut (from the 8th century)=== |
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[[File:COLLECTIE TROPENMUSEUM Kleurenlitho getiteld Katafalk van het hoofd van Longpoetih TMnr 5795-29.jpg|thumb|Canoe-sarcophagus of the Dayak: a burial that recalls the Malagasy tradition that former Ntaolo Vazimba and Vezo buried their dead in canoe-sarcophagi in the sea or in a lake]] |
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According to oral tradition,<ref>Ramilison E.,''Andriantomara-Andriamamilazabe: loharanon'ny andriana nanjaka teto Imerina'', Antananarivo, Lutheran Printing</ref> new Austronesian clans ([[Malays (ethnic group)|Malays]], [[Javanese people|Javanese]], [[Bugis]], and [[Orang Laut]]),<ref>Adelaar, KA (2006) [https://web.archive.org/web/20080828022131/http://www.santafe.edu/events/workshops/images/6/6d/IndonesianMigrations.pdf "The Indonesian migrations to Madagascar: Making sense of the multidisciplinary evidence"])</ref> historically referred to in general, regardless of their native island, as the "[[Hova (Madagascar)|Hova]]"<ref name="Callet" /> (from Old Bugis ''uwa'', "commoner") landed in the north-west and east coast of the island. Adelaar's observations of Old Malay (Sanskritised), Old Javanese (Sanskritised) and Old Bugis borrowings in the initial Proto-Southeast-Barito language indicate that the first Hova waves came probably in the 7th century at the earliest.<ref>Adelaar, “The Indonesian Migrations to Madagascar”, p. 15.</ref> Marre and Dahl pointed out that the number of Sanskrit words in Malagasy is very limited compared with the large number now found in Indonesian languages, which means that the Indonesian settlers must have come at an early stage of Hindu influence, that is ca. 400 AD.<ref>Dahl, Otto Chr. ''Malgache et Maanjan: une Comparaison Linguistique'', Egede-Instituttet Avhandlinger, no. 3. Oslo: Egede-Instituttet, 1951.</ref> |
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The Hova were probably derived from Indonesian [[thalassocracy|thalassocracies]]. Their leaders were known as the ''diana'' in the Southeast and ''[[andriana]]'' or ''raondriana'' in the Center and the West<ref name="Callet" /><ref>Ramilison, 1951</ref><ref name="Ramilison">{{cite book |last=Ramilison |first=Emmanuel |year=1951 |title=Ny loharanon'ny andriana nanjaka teto Imerina : Andriantomara-Andriamamilazabe |publisher=Imprimerie Ankehitriny}}</ref> (from ''(ra)-hadi-an'', "lord" or "master" in Old Javanese,<ref name="Adelaar" /> modern Javanese [[Priyayi#Titles|''raden'']], also found in the Bugis noble title [[:fr:Titres de noblesse indonésiens#Bugis|''andi'']] and the [[Tagalog language|Tagalog]] word for "king" ''hari''). They for the most part allied with Vazimba clans:<ref>Ravelojaona ''et alii'' 1937</ref><ref name="Ravelojaona">{{cite book |last=Ravelojaona |first=Randzavola, Rajaonah G. |year=1937 |title=Firaketana ny Fiteny sy ny Zavatra Malagasy |publisher=Antananarivo: Imprimerie Tanananarivienne}}</ref> |
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* In the Northwest area of the current Ankoala (from ''kuala'', "estuary" in Malay and Indonesian) where the Hova ''Orang Laut'' (''Antalaotra'' in Malagasy) had probably established their base for their Indian Ocean operations. |
* In the Northwest area of the current Ankoala (from ''kuala'', "estuary" in Malay and Indonesian) where the Hova ''Orang Laut'' (''Antalaotra'' in Malagasy) had probably established their base for their Indian Ocean operations. |
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* On the |
* On the east coast (Betsimisaraka) where the Hova leaders were also called ''Filo (ha) be'' by the "neo-Vezo" clans. |
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* In the |
* In the southeast where the leaders ("Diana") of the Zafiraminia and Zafikazimambo clans allied with the "neo-Vezo" and founded the later Antaisaka, Antaimoro and Antambahoaka kingdoms. |
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* In the |
* In the west: the Maroserana dynasty which founded the Sakalava Kingdom is itself a result of Zafiraminia on the east coast. |
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* In the Center where repeated alliances among the Hova leaders (the ''andriana'') (such as Andrianerinerina, Andriantomara and their descendants<ref name="Ramilison"/>) with the chiefs of Vazimba clans (such as Rafandrana and his descendants<ref>Callet, F., op. cit.</ref>) led to the |
* In the Center where repeated alliances among the Hova leaders (the ''andriana'') (such as Andrianerinerina, Andriantomara and their descendants<ref name="Ramilison" />) with the chiefs of Vazimba clans (such as Rafandrana and his descendants<ref>Callet, F., op. cit.</ref>) led to the Merina and Betsileo Kingdoms. |
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With the arrival of Islam, Persian and Arab traders soon supplanted the Indonesians on the coast of Africa and eventually extended their control over the [[Comoro |
With the arrival of Islam, Persian and Arab traders soon supplanted the Indonesians on the coast of Africa and eventually extended their control over the [[Comoro Islands]] and parts of the coast of Madagascar. Meanwhile, with competition in the new joint naval powers of [[Song dynasty|Song China]] and [[Chola dynasty|Chola South India]], the thalassocracies of Indonesia were in rapid decline, though the Portuguese still encountered Javanese sailors in Madagascar in the sixteenth century. |
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<!-- although the Portuguese are still Javanese sailors in Madagascar when they deal with the {{formatnum: sixteenth century}}. --> |
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===Bantus (from the 9th century)=== |
===Bantus (from the 9th century)=== |
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There is archaeological evidence that [[Bantu peoples |
There is archaeological evidence that [[Bantu peoples]], agro-pastoralists from East Africa, may have begun migrating to the island as early as the 6th and 7th century.<ref name="Historical Archaeology" /> Other historical and archaeological records suggest that some of the Bantus were descendants of [[Swahili people|Swahili]] sailors and merchants who used [[dhow]]s to traverse the seas to the western shores of Madagascar.<ref name="Imperial Madagascar">History of Madagascar [https://books.google.com/books?id=13Yt9jLuKzsC&dq=history+of+Madagascar+Swahili&pg=PA49 An economic history of Imperial Madagascar, 1750–1895. By Gwyn Campbell. pg. 49] (2005). Retrieved February 15, 2012</ref> Finally some sources theorize that during the Middle Ages, Arab, Persian and Neo-Austronesian slave-traders<ref name="Larson" /> brought Bantu people to Madagascar transported by Swahili merchants to feed foreign demand for slaves.<ref name="Cambridge History">Cambridge World History of Slavery [https://books.google.com/books?id=5qp_3aL76isC&dq=history+of+Madagascar+Swahili&pg=PA76 The Cambridge World History of Slavery: The ancient Mediterranean world. By Keith Bradley, Paul Cartledge. pg. 76] (2011). Retrieved February 15, 2012</ref> Years of intermarriages created the [[Malagasy people]], who primarily speak [[Malagasy language|Malagasy]], an Austronesian language with [[Bantu languages|Bantu]] influences.<ref name="Tofanelli">[https://web.archive.org/web/20140909112552/http://mbe.oxfordjournals.org/content/26/9/2109.abstract On the Origins and Admixture of Malagasy: New Evidence from High-Resolution Analyses of Paternal and Maternal Lineages]</ref> There are consequently many (Proto-)[[Swahili language|Swahili]] borrowings in the initial Proto-SEB Malagasy language.<ref>Dahl, O. (1991), op. cit.</ref> This [[Substrata (linguistics)|substratum]] is especially significantly present in the domestic and agricultural vocabulary (e.g. ''omby'' or ''aombe'', "beef", from Swahili ''ng'ombe''; ''tongolo'' "onion" from Swahili ''kitunguu''; Malagasy ''nongo'' "pot" from ''nunggu'' in Swahili<ref name="Adelaar" />). |
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===Europeans (from 1500)=== |
===Europeans (from 1500)=== |
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[[File:CantinoPlanisphere-Mascareignes.png|thumb|325px|Map of Madagascar and the [[Mascarene Islands]] (1502)]] |
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European contact began in 1500, when the [[Portugal|Portuguese]] sea captain [[Diogo Dias]] sighted the island after his ship separated from a fleet going to India.<ref name="CathEncy|wstitle=Madagascar">{{CathEncy|wstitle=Madagascar}}</ref> The Portuguese continued trading with the islanders and named the island ''São Lourenço'' (St. Lawrence). In 1666, [[François Caron]], the director general of the newly formed [[French East India Company]], sailed to Madagascar.<ref>{{cite book |last=Vincent |first=Rose |title=The French in India: From Diamond Traders to Sanskrit Scholars |origyear= |origmonth= |url= |accessdate= |edition= |series= |date= |year=1990 |month= |publisher=Popular Prakashan |location= |language= |isbn=0-86132-259-2 }}</ref> The company failed to establish a colony on Madagascar but established ports on the nearby islands of Bourbon and Ile-de-France (today's [[Réunion]] and [[Mauritius]]). In the late 17th century, the [[France|French]] established trading posts along the east coast. On [[Nosy Boraha]], a small island off the northeastern coast of Madagascar, Captain Misson and his pirate crew allegedly founded the famous [[pirate utopia]] of [[Libertalia]] in the late 17th century. From about 1774 to 1824, Madagascar was a favorite haunt for pirates. Many European sailors were shipwrecked on the coasts of the island, among them [[Robert Drury (Sailor)|Robert Drury]], whose journal is one of the few written depictions of life in southern Madagascar during the 18th century.<ref>''From MADAGASCAR to the MALAGASY REPUBLIC'', by Raymond K. Kent pg 65–71</ref> Sailors sometimes called Madagascar "Island of the Moon".<ref>''Madagascar: An Historical and Descriptive Account of the Island and Its Former Dependencies'' by [[Samuel Pasfield Oliver]], p. 6. (excerpted in Google Book Search)</ref> |
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Europe knew of Madagascar through Arab sources; thus ''[[The Travels of Marco Polo]]'' claimed that "the inhabitants are Saracens, or followers of the law of Mohammed", without mentioning other inhabitants. Other than its size and location, everything about the island in the book describes southeastern Africa, not Madagascar. European contact began on 10 August 1500, when the [[Portuguese people|Portuguese]] sea captain [[Diogo Dias]] sighted the island after his ship separated from a fleet going to India.<ref name="CathEncy|wstitle=Madagascar">{{CathEncy|wstitle=Madagascar}}</ref>{{r|ley196608}} The Portuguese traded with the islanders and named the island ''São Lourenço'' ([[Saint Lawrence]]). In 1666, [[François Caron]], the director general of the newly formed [[French East India Company]], sailed to Madagascar.<ref>{{cite book |last=Vincent |first=Rose |title=The French in India: From Diamond Traders to Sanskrit Scholars |year=1990 |publisher=Popular Prakashan |isbn=978-0-86132-259-6 }}</ref> The company failed to establish a colony on Madagascar but established ports on the nearby islands of Bourbon (now [[Réunion]]) and [[Isle de France (Mauritius)|Isle de France]] (now [[Mauritius]]). In the late 17th century, the French established trading posts along the east coast. On [[Île Sainte-Marie]], a small island off the northeastern coast of Madagascar, Captain Misson and his pirate crew allegedly founded the famous [[pirate utopia]] of [[Libertatia]] in the late 17th century. From about 1774 to 1824, Madagascar was a favourite haunt for pirates. Many European sailors were shipwrecked on the coasts of the island, among them [[Robert Drury (sailor)|Robert Drury]], whose journal is one of the few written depictions of life in southern Madagascar during the 18th century.<ref>''From MADAGASCAR to the MALAGASY REPUBLIC'', by Raymond K. Kent pg 65–71</ref> Sailors sometimes called Madagascar "Island of the Moon".<ref>''Madagascar: An Historical and Descriptive Account of the Island and Its Former Dependencies'' by [[Samuel Pasfield Oliver]], p. 6. (excerpted in Google Book Search)</ref> |
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====European settlements==== |
====European settlements==== |
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By the 15th century Europeans had wrested control of the [[spice |
By the 15th century, Europeans had wrested control of the [[spice trade]] from the Muslims. They did this by bypassing the Middle East and sending their cargo-ships around the [[Cape of Good Hope]] to India. The Portuguese mariner [[Diogo Dias]] became the first European to set foot on Madagascar when his ship, bound for India, blew off course in 1500. In the ensuing 200 years, the English and French tried (and failed) to establish settlements on the island. |
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Fever, dysentery, hostile Malagasy, and the trying arid climate of southern Madagascar soon terminated the English settlement near [[Toliara |
Fever, dysentery, hostile Malagasy, and the trying arid climate of southern Madagascar soon terminated the English settlement near [[Toliara]] in 1646. Another English settlement in the north in Île Sainte-Marie came to an end in 1649. The French colony at [[Tôlanaro]] (Fort Dauphin) fared a little better: it lasted thirty years. On Christmas night 1672, local Antanosy tribesmen, perhaps angry because fourteen French soldiers in the fort had recently divorced their Malagasy wives to marry fourteen French orphan-women sent out to the colony, massacred the fourteen grooms and thirteen of the fourteen brides. The Antanosy then besieged the stockade at Tôlanaro for eighteen months. A ship of the French East India Company rescued the surviving thirty men and one widow in 1674. |
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In 1665, [[François Caron]], the Director General of the newly formed [[French East India Company]], sailed to Madagascar. The Company failed to found a |
In 1665, [[François Caron]], the Director General of the newly formed [[French East India Company]], sailed to Madagascar. The Company failed to found a colony on Madagascar but established ports on the nearby islands of Bourbon and Île-de-France (today's [[Réunion]] and [[Mauritius]] respectively). In the late 17th century, the French established trading-posts along the east coast.<ref name="HISTORY OF MADAGASCAR"/> |
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====Pirates and slave-traders==== |
====Pirates and slave-traders==== |
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[[File:A new draught of the Island of MADAGASCAR ats St. LORENZO with Augustin Bay and the Island of Mombass at Large NYPL1640654.tiff|thumb|Map of Madagascar and surroundings, circa 1702–1707]] |
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Between 1680 and 1725, Madagascar became a [[pirate]] stronghold. Many unfortunate sailors became shipwrecked and stranded on the island. Those who survived settled down with the natives, or more often, found French or English colonies on the island or even pirate havens and thus became pirates themselves. One such case, that of [[Robert Drury (Sailor)|Robert Drury]],<ref> |
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[[File:A chart of the WESTERN part of the EAST-INDIES with all the adjacent Islands from cape Bona Esperanca to the Island of Zelone NYPL1640657.tiff|thumb|Map of Madagascar and the western portion of the East Indies, circa 1702–1707]] |
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''From Madagascar to the Malagasy Republic'' by Raymond K. Kent. Westport, Conn. : Greenwood Press, 1976. ISBN 0-8371-8421-5 pages 55–71 |
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Between 1680 and 1725, Madagascar became a [[pirate]] stronghold. Many unfortunate sailors became shipwrecked and stranded on the island. Those who survived settled down with the natives, or more often, found French or English colonies on the island or even pirate havens and thus became pirates themselves. One such case, that of Robert Drury,<ref>''From Madagascar to the Malagasy Republic'' by Raymond K. Kent, Westport, Conn.: Greenwood Press, 1976 ({{ISBN|0-8371-8421-5}}), pages 55–71.</ref> |
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</ref> |
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resulted in a journal giving one of the few written depictions of southern Madagascar in the 18th century. |
resulted in a journal giving one of the few written depictions of southern Madagascar in the 18th century. |
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Notable pirates including [[William Kidd]], [[Henry Every]], [[John Bowen (pirate)|John Bowen]], and [[Thomas Tew]] made Antongil Bay and Île Sainte-Marie (a small island 12 miles off the northeast coast of Madagascar) their bases of operations. The pirates plundered merchant ships in the Indian Ocean, the [[Red Sea]], and the [[Persian Gulf]]. They deprived Europe-bound ships of their silks, cloth, spices, and jewels. Vessels captured going in the opposite direction (to India) lost their coin, gold, and silver. The pirates robbed the Indian cargo ships that traded between ports in the Indian Ocean as well as ships commissioned by the [[East India Company|East India Companies]] of France, England, and the Netherlands. The pilgrim fleet sailing between Surat in India and Mocha on the tip of the Arabian Peninsula were a favorite target, because the wealthy Muslim pilgrims often carried jewels and other finery with them to Mecca. Merchants in India, various ports of Africa, and Réunion showed willingness to [[Fence (criminal)|fence]] the pirates' stolen goods. The low-paid seamen who manned merchant ships in the Indian Ocean hardly put up a fight, seeing as they had little reason or motivation to risk their lives. The pirates often recruited crewmen from the ships they plundered. |
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With regard to piracy in Malagasy waters, note the (semi-)legendary accounts of the alleged pirate-state of |
With regard to piracy in Malagasy waters, note the (semi-)legendary accounts of the alleged pirate-state of Libertalia. |
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Prior to the arrival of the Europeans, certain Malagasy tribes occasionally waged wars to capture and enslave prisoners. They either sold the slaves to Arab traders or kept them on-hand as laborers. Following the arrival of European slavers, human slaves became more valuable, and the coastal tribes of Madagascar took to warring with each other to obtain prisoners for the lucrative slave-trade. Instead of spears and cutlasses, the tribesmen fought with muskets, musket-balls, and gunpowder that they obtained from the Europeans, conducting fierce and brutal wars. On account of their relationship to the pirates |
Prior to the arrival of the Europeans, certain Malagasy tribes occasionally waged wars to capture and enslave prisoners. They either sold the slaves to Arab traders or kept them on-hand as laborers. Following the arrival of European slavers, human slaves became more valuable, and the coastal tribes of Madagascar took to warring with each other to obtain prisoners for the lucrative slave-trade. Instead of spears and cutlasses, the tribesmen fought with muskets, musket-balls, and gunpowder that they obtained from the Europeans, conducting fierce and brutal wars. On account of their relationship to the pirates, the [[Betsimisaraka people|Betsimisaraka]] in eastern Madagascar had more firearms than anyone else. They overpowered their neighbors, the [[Antankarana]] and [[Tsimihety people|Tsimihety]], and even raided the [[Comoro Islands]]. As the tribe on the west coast with the most connections to the slave trade, the [[Sakalava people]] also had access to guns and powder. |
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Today, the people of Madagascar can be considered as the product of mixing between the first occupants, the ''vahoaka ntaolo'' |
Today, the people of Madagascar can be considered as the product of mixing between the first occupants, the ''vahoaka ntaolo'' Austronesians (''Vazimba'' and ''Vezo'') and those arrived later (''Hova'' neo-Austronesians, Persians, Arabs, Africans and Europeans). |
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[[Genotype|Genotypically]], the original Austronesian heritage is more or less evenly distributed throughout the island. Researchers have noticed the "Polynesian motif" everywhere:<ref>Hurles ''et alii'' (2005), Ricaut ''et alii'' (2009), Hagelberg ''et alii'' (2008)</ref> an old marker of Austronesian populations from before the great immigration to the islands of Polynesia and Melanesia. This fact would require a starting common home among the |
[[Genotype|Genotypically]], the original Austronesian heritage is more or less evenly distributed throughout the island. Researchers have noticed the "Polynesian motif" everywhere:<ref>Hurles ''et alii'' (2005), Ricaut ''et alii'' (2009), Hagelberg ''et alii'' (2008)</ref> an old marker of Austronesian populations from before the great immigration to the islands of Polynesia and Melanesia. This fact would require a starting common home among the Proto-Malagasy ''vahoaka ntaolo'' (gone west to Madagascar) and the ancestors of the current Polynesians (left for the Pacific Islands in the East) between 500 BCE – 1 CE. |
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== Feudal era (1500–1895) == |
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[[Phenotype|phenotypically]], it is among the malagasy populations of the highlands (Merina, Betsileo, Bezanozano, Sihanaka), more [[endogamy|endogamous]], that the [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki / # Asian_people Physical_features Austronesian ''Sundadont Mongoloid ''] phenotype is more significant. One can also note some [[Australoid race|Australoid'''']] and ''Negrito'' phenotype everywhere (including in the highlands). Unlike the East African Bantu phenotype, the Austronesian "Negrito" phenotype is characterized by its small size. |
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{{main |Merina |Betsileo |Bezanozano |Sihanaka |Tsimihety |Bara people |l6=Bara |Antakarana |Sakalava |Vezo |Mahafaly |Antaisaka |Antambahoaka |Antemoro |Tanala |Betsimisaraka people |l5=Betsimisaraka}} |
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[[File:Radama I, portrait by Ramanankirahina.gif|thumb|right|Radama I, the first monarch of the kingdom unified central Madagascar.]] |
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== |
===Rise of the great kingdoms=== |
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Those new immigrants of the Middle Ages were a minority in numbers, yet their cultural contributions, political and technological to the neo-Vazimba and neo-Vezo world substantially altered their society and is the cause of the major upheavals of the sixteenth century that led to the Malagasy feudal era. |
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{{Main | Merina | Betsileo | Bezanozano | Sihanaka | Tsimihety | Bara people}} |
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{{Main | Antakarana | Sakalava | Vezo | Mahafaly | Antandroy }} |
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{{Main | Antaisaka | Antambahoaka | Antaimoro (people) | Tanala | Betsimisaraka}} |
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[[File:Radama1.gif|thumb | right | Radama I, the first monarch of the kingdom unified central Madagascar.]] |
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On the coasts, the integration of the East Asians, Middle Easterns, Bantus and Portuguese led to the establishment of the kingdoms of the [[Antakarana]], [[Boina Kingdom|Boina]], [[Menabe]] and [[Vezo]] on the west coast, the [[Mahafaly]] and [[Antandroy]] in the south, and the [[Antesaka]], [[Antambahoaka]], [[Antemoro]], [[Tanala|Antanala]] and [[Betsimisaraka people|Betsimisaraka]] on the east coast. |
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Those new immigrants of the middle age were a minority in numbers, yet their cultural contributions, political and technological to the neo-Vazimba and neo-Vezo world substantially altered their society and is the cause of the major upheavals of the sixteenth that led to the malagasy feudal era. |
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In the interior, the struggle for hegemony between the different Neo-Vazimba clans of central highlands, called the ''Hova'' by the coastal Neo-Vezo clans, led to the creation of the [[Merina]], [[Betsileo]], [[Bezanozano]], [[Sihanaka]], [[Tsimihety]] and [[Bara people|Bara]] kingdoms. |
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On the coasts, the integration of the East Asians, Middle Easterns, East Africans (Bantus) and Europeans (Portuguese) gave birth to [[Antakarana]] [[Boina Kingdom|Boina]] [[Menabe]] and [[Vezo]] (West Coast), [[Mahafaly]] and [[Antandroy]] (South), [[Antesaka]] [[Antambahoaka]] [[Antemoro]] [[Tanala|Antanala]] [[Betsimisaraka people|Betsimisaraka]] (East Coast) kingdoms/tribes . |
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The birth of these kingdoms/tribes essentially altered the political structure of the ancient world of the Vahoaka Ntaolo, but for the most part the common language, customs, traditions, religion and economy was preserved. |
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In the interior, the struggle for hegemony between the different Neo-Vazimba clans of central highlands (called the ''Hova'' by the coastal Neo-Vezo clans) led to the birth of the [[Merina]] [[Betsileo]] [[Bezanozano]] [[Sihanaka]] [[Tsimihety]] and [[Bara people|Bara]] kingdoms/tribes. |
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Among the Central Kingdoms, the most important were the [[Betsileo]] kingdoms (Fandriana, Fisakana, Manandriana, Isandra) to the south, and the [[Merina]] kingdoms to the north. These were definitively unified in the early 19th century by [[Andrianampoinimerina]]. His son and successor [[Radama I]] (reigning 1810–1828) opened his country to foreign influence. With the support of the British, he extended its authority over much of the island. From 1817, the central Merina kingdoms, Betsileo, Bezanozano, and Sihanaka, unified by Radama I were known to the outside world as the [[Kingdom of Madagascar]]. |
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The birth of these kingdoms/tribes essentially altered the political structure of the ancient world of the Vahoaka Ntaolo, but the vast majority of other categories remained intact in these new realms: the common language, customs, traditions, the sacred, the economy, the art of the olds remained preserved in the vast majority of forms with variations by region. |
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===Sakalava=== |
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Among the Central Kingdoms, the most important were in the south, the [[Betsileo]] kingdom and to the north, the [[Merina]] kingdom. These were definitely unified in the early 19th century by [[Andrianampoinimerina]]. Then, his son and successor [[Radama I]] (reigning 1810–1828) opened his country to European influence exerted mainly by the British. With their support, he extends its authority over much of the island. Thus, starting from 1817, the central Merina kingdoms, betsileo, Bezanozano, and Sihanaka, unified by Radama I get to the outside world, the [[Kingdom of Madagascar]]. |
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The island's West clan chiefs began to extend their power through trade with their Indian Ocean neighbors, first with Arab, [[Persian people|Persian]] and [[Somali people|Somali]] traders who connected Madagascar with East Africa, the Middle East and India, and later with European slave traders.<ref>Cities of the Middle East and North Africa By Michael Dumper, Bruce E. Stanley, Janet L. Abu-Lug</ref> The wealth created in Madagascar through trade created a state system ruled by powerful regional monarchs known as the Maroserana. These monarchs adopted the cultural traditions of subjects in their territories and expanded their kingdoms. They took on divine status, and new nobility and artisan classes were created.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.metmuseum.org/toah/hd/madg_1/hd_madg_1.htm |title=Kingdoms of Madagascar: Maroserana and Merina |publisher=Metmuseum.org |access-date=25 April 2010}}</ref> Madagascar functioned as a contact port for the other Swahili seaport city-states such as [[Sofala]], [[Kilwa Kisiwani|Kilwa]], [[Mombasa]] and [[Zanzibar]]. By the Middle Ages, large [[chiefdom]]s began to dominate considerable areas of the island. Among these were the [[Betsimisaraka people|Betsimisaraka]] alliance of the eastern coast and the [[Sakalava]] chiefdoms of the [[Menabe]] (centered in what is now the town of [[Morondava]]) and of [[Boina Kingdom|Boina]] (centered in what is now the provincial capital of [[Mahajanga]]). The influence of the Sakalava extended across what are now the provinces of [[Antsiranana]], [[Mahajanga]] and [[Toliara]]. |
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The island's chiefs began to extend their power through trade with their Indian Ocean neighbours, notably East Africa, the Middle East and [[India]]. Large chiefdoms began to dominate considerable areas of the island. Among these were the [[Sakalava]] chiefdoms of the [[Menabe]], centred in what is now the town of [[Morondava]], and of [[Boina Kingdom|Boina]], centered in what is now the provincial capital of [[Mahajanga]] (Majunga). The influence of the Sakalava extended across what are now the provinces of [[Antsiranana]], Mahajanga and Toliara. |
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===The Sakalava=== |
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According to local tradition, the founders of the Sakalava kingdom were Maroseraña (or Maroseranana, "those who owned many ports") princes, from the Fiherenana (now [[Toliara]]). They quickly subdued the neighbouring princes, starting with the southern ones, in the Mahafaly area. The true founder of Sakalava dominance was [[Andriamisara]]; his son [[Andriandahifotsy]] (c. 1610–1658) then extended his authority northwards, past the [[Mangoky River]]. His two sons, Andriamanetiarivo and Andriamandisoarivo, extended gains further up to the Tsongay region (now Mahajanga). At about that time, the empire's unity starts to split, resulting in a southern kingdom (Menabe) and a northern kingdom (Boina). Further splits resulted, despite continued extension of the Boina princes' reach into the extreme north, in Antankarana country. |
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The island's West clan chiefs began to extend their power through trade with their Indian Ocean neighbors, first with Arab, [[Persian people|Persian]] and [[Somali people|Somali]] traders who connected Madagascar with East Africa, the Middle East and India, and later with European slave traders.<ref>Cities of the Middle East and North Africa By Michael Dumper, Bruce E. Stanley, Janet L. Abu-Lughod pg 391</ref> The wealth created in Madagascar through trade created a state system ruled by powerful regional monarchs known as the Maroserana. These monarchs adopted the cultural traditions of subjects in their territories and expanded their kingdoms. They took on divine status, and new nobility and artisan classes were created.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.metmuseum.org/toah/hd/madg_1/hd_madg_1.htm |title=Kingdoms of Madagascar: Maroserana and Merina |publisher=Metmuseum.org |date= |accessdate=2010-04-25}}</ref> Madagascar functioned as a contact port for the other Swahili seaport city-states such as [[Sofala]], [[Kilwa Kisiwani|Kilwa]], [[Mombasa]] and [[Zanzibar]]. By the Middle Ages, large [[chiefdom]]s began to dominate considerable areas of the island. Among these were the [[Betsimisaraka people|Betsimisaraka]] alliance of the eastern coast and the [[Sakalava]] chiefdoms of the [[Menabe]] (centered in what is now the town of [[Morondava]]) and of [[Boina Kingdom|Boina]] (centered in what is now the provincial capital of [[Mahajanga]]). The influence of the Sakalava extended across what are now the provinces of [[Antsiranana]], [[Mahajanga]] and [[Toliara]]. |
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The island's chiefs began to extend their power through trade with their [[Indian Ocean]] neighbours, notably [[East Africa]], the [[Middle East]] and [[India]]. Large chiefdoms began to dominate considerable areas of the island. Among these were the [[Sakalava]] chiefdoms of the [[Menabe]], centred in what is now the town of [[Morondava]], and of [[Boina Kingdom|Boina]], centered in what is now the provincial capital of [[Mahajanga]] (Majunga). The influence of the Sakalava extended across what are now the provinces of [[Antsiranana]], Mahajanga and Toliara. |
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According to local tradition, the founders of the Sakalava kingdom were Maroseraña (or Maroseranana, "those who owned many ports") princes, from the Fiherenana (now [[Toliara]]). They quickly subdued the neighbouring princes, starting with the southern ones, in the Mahafaly area. The true founder of Sakalava dominance was [[Andriamisara]]; his son [[Andriandahifotsy]] (c1610-1658) then extended his authority northwards, past the [[Mangoky River]]. His two sons, Andriamanetiarivo and Andriamandisoarivo, extended gains further up to the Tsongay region (now Mahajanga). At about that time, the empire's unity starts to split, resulting in a southern kingdom (Menabe) and a northern kingdom (Boina). Further splits resulted, despite continued extension of the Boina princes' reach into the extreme north, in Antankarana country. |
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The Sakalava rulers of this period are known through the memoirs of Europeans such as [[Robert Drury (Sailor)|Robert Drury]], [[James Cook]], Barnvelt (1719), Valentyn (1726). |
The Sakalava rulers of this period are known through the memoirs of Europeans such as [[Robert Drury (Sailor)|Robert Drury]], [[James Cook]], Barnvelt (1719), Valentyn (1726). |
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===Merina monarchy=== |
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[[File:Madagascar—Gathering of The People for The Making of Laws (LMS, 1869, pp. 52).jpg|thumb|right|280px|Madagascar—Gathering of The People for The Making of Laws (LMS, 1869, p.52)<ref name="Fruits-LMS">{{cite book|editor1-last=London Missionary Society|title=Fruits of Toil in the London Missionary Society|date=1869|publisher=John Snow & Co.|location=London|page=525|url=https://archive.org/details/fruitsoftoilinth17115gut|access-date=September 12, 2016}}</ref>]] |
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King [[Andrianampoinimerina]] (1785–1810) and his son, [[Radama I]] (1810–1828) succeeded in uniting nearly all of Madagascar under [[Merina]] rule. These kings and their successors descended from a line of [[List of Malagasy monarchs|ancient Merina royalty]] who ruled the lands of [[Imerina]] in the central Highlands of Madagascar since at least the 16th century. Even prior to their eventual domination and unification of the entire island, the political and cultural activities of Merina royalty were to leave an indelible mark on contemporary Malagasy identity. |
King [[Andrianampoinimerina]] (1785–1810) and his son, [[Radama I]] (1810–1828) succeeded in uniting nearly all of Madagascar under [[Merina]] rule. These kings and their successors descended from a line of [[List of Malagasy monarchs|ancient Merina royalty]] who ruled the lands of [[Imerina]] in the central Highlands of Madagascar since at least the 16th century. Even prior to their eventual domination and unification of the entire island, the political and cultural activities of Merina royalty were to leave an indelible mark on contemporary Malagasy identity. |
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With the establishment of dominion over the greater part of the Highlands, Andrianampoinimerina became the first [[List of Malagasy monarchs|Merina monarch]] to be considered a king of Madagascar. The island continued to be ruled by a succession of Merina monarchs until the last of them, [[Ranavalona III]], was deposed and exiled to Algeria by French forces who conquered and colonized the island in 1895 |
With the establishment of dominion over the greater part of the Highlands, Andrianampoinimerina became the first [[List of Malagasy monarchs|Merina monarch]] to be considered a king of Madagascar. The island continued to be ruled by a succession of Merina monarchs until the last of them, [[Ranavalona III]], was deposed and exiled to Algeria by French forces who conquered and colonized the island in 1895. |
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====King Andrianampoinimerina==== |
====King Andrianampoinimerina==== |
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Andrianampoinimerina, grandson of King [[Andriambelomasina]] and successor to his uncle King [[Andrianjafy]], successfully reunited the fragmented Merina kingdom through a combination of diplomacy, strategic political marriages and successful military campaigns against rival princes. Andrianampoinimerina distinguished himself from other kings by codifying laws and supervising the building of dikes and trenches to increase the amount of arable land around his capital at Antananarivo in a successful bid to end the famines that had wracked Imerina for decades. The king ambitiously proclaimed: ''Ny ranomasina no valapariako'' (“the sea is the boundary of my rice-field”), and by the time of his death in 1810 he had conquered the Bara and Betsileo highland tribes, laying the groundwork for expansion of his kingdom to the shores of the island. |
Andrianampoinimerina, grandson of King [[Andriambelomasina]] and successor to his uncle King [[Andrianjafy]], successfully reunited the fragmented Merina kingdom through a combination of diplomacy, strategic political marriages and successful military campaigns against rival princes. Andrianampoinimerina distinguished himself from other kings by codifying laws and supervising the building of dikes and trenches to increase the amount of arable land around his capital at Antananarivo in a successful bid to end the famines that had wracked Imerina for decades. The king ambitiously proclaimed: ''Ny ranomasina no valapariako'' (“the sea is the boundary of my rice-field”), and by the time of his death in 1810 he had conquered the Bara and Betsileo highland tribes, laying the groundwork for expansion of his kingdom to the shores of the island. |
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====King Radama I (1810–1828)==== |
====King Radama I (1810–1828)==== |
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Andrianampoinimerina's son [[Radama I]] (Radama the Great) assumed the throne during a turning-point in European history that had repercussions for Madagascar. With the defeat of [[Napoleon I of France|Napoléon]] in 1814/1815, the balance of power in Europe and in |
Andrianampoinimerina's son [[Radama I]] (Radama the Great) assumed the throne during a turning-point in European history that had repercussions for Madagascar. With the defeat of [[Napoleon I of France|Napoléon]] in 1814/1815, the balance of power in Europe and overseas shifted in [[United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland|Britain]]'s favor. The British, eager to exert control over the trade routes of the Indian Ocean, had captured the islands of [[Réunion]] and [[Mauritius]] from the French in 1810. Although they returned Réunion to France, they kept Mauritius as a naval base which would maintain trade links throughout the [[British Empire]]. Mauritius's governor, in a bid to woo Madagascar from French control, recognized Radama I as King of Madagascar, a diplomatic maneuver meant to underscore the idea of the sovereignty of the island and thus to preclude claims by any European powers. |
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Radama I signed treaties with the United Kingdom outlawing the slave trade and admitting Protestant missionaries into Madagascar. |
Radama I signed treaties with the United Kingdom outlawing the slave trade and admitting Protestant missionaries into Madagascar. As a result of these treaties Protestant missionaries from Britain would spread British influence in Madagascar; while outlawing the [[Slavery in Africa|slave trade]] would weaken Réunion's economy by depriving the island of slave laborers for France's [[sugar]] [[plantation]]s. In return for outlawing the slave trade, Madagascar received what the treaty called "The Equivalent": an annual sum of a thousand dollars in gold, another thousand in silver, stated amounts of gunpowder, flints, and muskets, plus 400 surplus [[British Army]] [[uniform]]s. The governor of Mauritius also sent military advisers who accompanied and sometimes led Merina soldiers in their battles against the Sakalava and Betsimisaraka. In 1824, having defeated the Betsimisaraka, Radama I declared, "Today, the whole island is mine! Madagascar has but one master." The king died in 1828 while leading his army on a punitive expedition against the Betsimisaraka. |
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====Queen Ranavalona I (1828–1861)==== |
====Queen Ranavalona I (1828–1861)==== |
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[[File:Christian martyrs burned at the stake in Madagascar.jpg|thumb|180px|Christians burned at the stake by Ranavalona I]] |
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The 33-year reign of Queen [[Ranavalona I]], the widow of Radama I, was characterized by a struggle to preserve the cultural and political sovereignty of Madagascar from French and English colonial designs. The queen repudiated the treaties that Radama I had signed with Britain and in 1835 after issuing a royal edict prohibiting the practice of [[Christianity]] in Madagascar, she expelled British missionaries from the island and began persecuting Christian converts who would not renounce their religion. Malagasy Christians would remember this period as ''ny tany maizina'', or "the time when the land was dark". |
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The 33-year reign of Queen [[Ranavalona I]], the widow of Radama I, was characterized by an increase in the size of the Kingdom of Madagascar as it conquered neighboring states as well as an effort to maintain the cultural and political sovereignty of Madagascar in the face of increasing foreign influence. The queen repudiated the treaties that Radama I had signed with Britain and, in 1835 after issuing a royal edict prohibiting the practice of Christianity in Madagascar, she expelled British missionaries from the island and began persecuting Christian converts who would not renounce their religion. Malagasy Christians would remember this period as ''ny tany maizina'', or "the time when the land was dark". |
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Unbeknownst to the queen, her son and heir, the crown-prince (the future [[Radama II of Madagascar|Radama II]]), attended Roman Catholic masses in secret.{{Citation needed|date=November 2010}} The young man grew up under the influence of French nationals in Antananarivo. In 1854, he wrote a letter to [[Napoleon III of France|Napoléon III]] inviting France to invade and uplift Madagascar.{{Citation needed|date=November 2010}} On June 28, 1855 he signed the [[Lambert Charter]]. This document gave Joseph-François Lambert, an enterprising French [[businessman]] who had arrived in Madagascar only three weeks before, the exclusive right to develop all minerals, forests, and unoccupied land in Madagascar in exchange for a 10-percent royalty payable to the Merina monarchy. In years to come, the French would show the Lambert Charter and the prince’s letter to Napoléon III to explain the Franco-Hova Wars and the annexation of Madagascar as a colony. In 1857, the queen uncovered a plot by her son (the future Radama II) and French nationals in the capital to remove her from power. She immediately expelled all foreigners from Madagascar, sparing her son. Ranavalona died in 1861. |
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During her reign, constant warfare, disease, slave labor, and harsh measures of justice resulted in a high mortality rate among the Malagasy population; the population of the island is estimated to have declined by half from 5 million to 2.5 million between 1833 and 1839.<ref>{{cite journal |last = Campbell |first = Gwyn |date = October 1991 |title = The state and pre-colonial demographic history: the case of nineteenth century Madagascar |journal = Journal of African History |volume = 23 |issue = 3 |pages = 415–445|doi = 10.1017/S0021853700031534 }}</ref> |
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====King Radama II (1861–1863)==== |
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{{Main|Radama II}} |
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Unbeknownst to the queen, her son and heir, the crown-prince (the future [[Radama II of Madagascar|Radama II]]), attended Roman Catholic masses in secret.{{Citation needed|date=November 2010}} The young man grew up under the influence of French nationals in Antananarivo. In 1854, he wrote a letter to [[Napoleon III of France|Napoléon III]] inviting France to invade and uplift Madagascar.{{Citation needed|date=November 2010}} On 28 June 1855 he signed the [[Lambert Charter]]. This document gave Joseph-François Lambert, an enterprising French businessman who had arrived in Madagascar only three weeks before, the exclusive right to develop all minerals, forests, and unoccupied land in Madagascar in exchange for a 10-percent royalty payable to the Merina monarchy. In years to come, the French would show the Lambert Charter and the prince's letter to Napoléon III to explain the Franco-Hova Wars and the annexation of Madagascar as a colony. In 1857, the queen uncovered a plot by her son (the future Radama II) and French nationals in the capital to remove her from power. She immediately expelled all foreigners from Madagascar, sparing her son. Ranavalona died in 1861. |
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In his brief two years on the throne, King [[Radama II of Madagascar|Radama II]] re-opened trade with Mauritius and Réunion, invited Christian missionaries<ref name="CathEncy|wstitle=Madagascar"/> and foreigners to return to Madagascar, and re-instated most of Radama I’s reforms. His liberal policies angered the aristocracy, however, and [[Rainivoninahitriniony]], the prime minister, engineered a [[coup d’état]] which resulted in the King's death by strangling. |
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==== King Radama II (1861–1863) ==== |
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{{main|Radama II}} |
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In his brief two years on the throne, King [[Radama II of Madagascar|Radama II]] re-opened trade with Mauritius and Réunion, invited Christian missionaries<ref name="CathEncy|wstitle=Madagascar" /> and foreigners to return to Madagascar, and re-instated most of Radama I's reforms. His liberal policies angered the aristocracy, however, and [[Rainivoninahitriniony]], the prime minister, engineered a coup d'état in which Radama II was strangled to death. |
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====Queen Rasoherina (1863–1868)==== |
====Queen Rasoherina (1863–1868)==== |
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[[File:Malagasi Embassy to Europe 1863 Rainifiringa Ralahimaholy with Rev John Duffus and Rasatranabo na Rainandrianandraina.jpg|thumb|Malagasy Embassy to Europe in 1863. Left to right: Rainifiringa |
[[File:Malagasi Embassy to Europe 1863 Rainifiringa Ralahimaholy with Rev John Duffus and Rasatranabo na Rainandrianandraina.jpg|thumb|Malagasy Embassy to Europe in 1863. Left to right: Rainifiringa Ralaimaholy, Rev. John Duffus and Rasatranabo aka Rainandrianandraina.]] A council of princes headed by [[Rainilaiarivony]] approached Rabodo, the widow of [[Radama II]], the day after the death of her husband. They gave her the conditions under which she could succeed to the throne. These conditions included the suppression of [[trial by ordeal]] as well as the monarchy's defense of [[freedom of religion]]. Rabodo, crowned queen on 13 May 1863 under the throne name of [[Rasoherina of Madagascar|Rasoherina]], reigned until her death on 1 April 1868.<ref>Frédéric Randriamamonjy, ''Tantaran'i Madagasikara Isam-Paritra'' (The history of Madagascar by Region), pages 529–534.</ref> |
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A council of princes headed by [[Rainilaiarivony]] approached Rabodo, the widow of [[Radama II]], the day after the death of her husband. They gave her the conditions under which she could succeed to the throne. These conditions included the suppression of [[trial by ordeal]] as well as the monarchy's defense of [[freedom of religion]]. Rabodo, crowned queen on May 13, 1863 under the throne name of [[Rasoherina of Madagascar|Rasoherina]], reigned until her death on April 1, 1868.<ref> |
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Frédéric Randriamamonjy, ''Tantaran'i Madagasikara Isam-Paritra'' (The history of Madagascar by Region), pages 529–534. |
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</ref> |
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The Malagasy people remember Queen Rasoherina for sending |
The Malagasy people remember Queen Rasoherina for sending ambassadors to London and Paris and for prohibiting [[Sunday market]]s. On 30 June 1865, she signed a treaty with the United Kingdom giving British citizens the right to rent land and property on the island and to have a resident ambassador. With the United States of America she signed a trade agreement that also limited the importation of weapons and the export of cattle. Finally, with France the queen signed a peace between her descendants and the descendants of the ''Emperor of France''.<ref>Frédéric Randriamamonjy, ''Tantaran'i Madagasikara Isam-Paritra'' (''The history of Madagascar by Region''), pages 529–534.</ref> Rasoherina married her prime minister, [[Rainivoninahitriniony]], but public outcry against his involvement in the murder of [[Radama II]] soon forced his resignation and exile to [[Betsileo]] country south of [[Imerina]]. She then married his brother, [[Rainilaiarivony]], head of the army at the time of Radama II's murder who was promoted to the post of Prime Minister upon the resignation and exile of his older brother. Rainilaiarivony would rule Madagascar from behind the scenes for the remaining 32 years of the Merina monarchy, marrying each of the final three queens of Madagascar in succession. |
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Frédéric Randriamamonjy, ''Tantaran'i Madagasikara Isam-Paritra'' (''The history of Madagascar by Region''), pages 529 – 534 |
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</ref> Rasoherina married her Prime Minister, [[Rainivoninahitriniony]], but public outcry against his involvement in the murder of [[Radama II]] soon forced his resignation and exile to [[Betsileo]] country south of [[Imerina]]. She then married his brother, [[Rainilaiarivony]], head of the army at the time of Radama II's murder who was promoted to the post of Prime Minister upon the resignation and exile of his older brother. Rainilaiarivony would rule Madagascar from behind the scenes for the remaining 32 years of the Merina monarchy, marrying each of the final three queens of Madagascar in succession. |
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====Queen Ranavalona II (1868–1883)==== |
====Queen Ranavalona II (1868–1883)==== |
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{{main|Ranavalona II}} |
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In 1869 Queen [[Ranavalona II of Madagascar|Ranavalona II]], previously educated by the [[London Missionary Society]], underwent baptism into the [[Church of England]] and subsequently made the [[Anglican]] faith the official [[state religion]] of Madagascar.<ref> |
In 1869, Queen [[Ranavalona II of Madagascar|Ranavalona II]], previously educated by the [[London Missionary Society]], underwent baptism into the [[Church of England]] and subsequently made the [[Anglican]] faith the official [[state religion]] of Madagascar.<ref>Madagascar now has three dioceses in the autonomous [[Church of the Province of the Indian Ocean]], part of the [[Anglican Communion]]. [http://www.anglicancommunion.org/mission/companion/diocese/2004toamasina.cfm]. Retrieved September 14, 2006.</ref> |
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The queen had all the ''[[sampy]]'' (traditional royal idols) burned in a public display. Catholic and Protestant [[missionaries]] arrived in numbers to build churches and schools. The reign of Queen Ranavalona II proved the high water mark of British influence in Madagascar. British goods and weapons arrived on the island by way of [[Cape Colony|South Africa]]. |
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Madagascar now has three dioceses in the autonomous [[Church of the Province of the Indian Ocean]], part of the [[Anglican Communion]]. [http://www.anglicancommunion.org/mission/companion/diocese/2004toamasina.cfm] retrieved on September 14, 2006 |
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</ref> |
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The queen had all the ''[[sampy]]'' (traditional royal idols) burned in a public display. Catholic and Protestant [[missionaries]] arrived in numbers to build churches and schools. The reign of Queen Ranavalona II proved the heyday of British influence in Madagascar. British arms and troops arrived on the island by way of [[South Africa]]. |
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====Queen Ranavalona III (1883–1897)==== |
====Queen Ranavalona III (1883–1897)==== |
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{{main|Ranavalona III}} |
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Her public coronation as queen took place on November |
Her public coronation as queen took place on 22 November 1883 and she took the name [[Ranavalona III]]. As her first order of business she confirmed the nomination of [[Rainilaiarivony]] and his entourage in their positions. She also promised to do away with the French threat.<ref>Frédéric Randriamamonjy, ''Tantaran'i Madagasikara Isam-Paritra'' (History of Madagascar by Region), pg 546.</ref> |
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Frédéric Randriamamonjy, ''Tantaran'i Madagasikara Isam-Paritra'' (History of Madagascar by Region), pg 546. |
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</ref> |
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====End of the monarchy==== |
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{{main|Franco-Hova Wars|First Madagascar expedition|Second Madagascar expedition}} |
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[[File:FrenchTroopsMadagasgar.jpg|thumb|Landing of the ''40th Battaillon de Chasseur à Pieds'' in [[Majunga]], between 5 May and 24 May 1895.]] |
[[File:FrenchTroopsMadagasgar.jpg|thumb|Landing of the ''40th Battaillon de Chasseur à Pieds'' in [[Majunga]], between 5 May and 24 May 1895.]] |
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Angry at the cancellation of the [[Lambert Charter]] and seeking to restore property |
Angry at the cancellation of the [[Lambert Charter]] and seeking to restore property seized from French citizens, France invaded Madagascar in 1883 in what became known as the first [[Franco-Hova War]] (''Hova'' as a name referring to the Merina aristocrats). At the war's end, Madagascar ceded [[Antsiranana]] (Diégo Suarez) on the northern coast to France and paid 560,000 [[gold franc]]s to the heirs of Joseph-François Lambert. In Europe, meanwhile, European diplomats had worked out an agreement whereby Britain, in order to establish control over the [[Sultanate of Zanzibar]], ceded its rights over the island of [[Heligoland]] to [[German Empire|Germany]] and renounced all claims of influence in Madagascar in favor of France. The agreement spelled the end of the Madagascan political independence. [[Rainilaiarivony]] had succeeded in playing the various European powers against one another, but now France could act without fear of British support towards the Madagascans.{{citation needed|date=November 2020}} |
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In 1895, a French [[flying |
In 1895, a French [[flying column]] landed in [[Mahajanga]] (Majunga) and marched by way of the [[Betsiboka River]] to the capital, [[Antananarivo]], taking the city's defenders by surprise (they had expected an attack from the much closer east coast). Twenty French soldiers died fighting and 6,000 died of [[malaria]] and other diseases before the second Franco-Hova War ended. In 1896 the [[French Parliament]] voted to [[annexation|annex]] Madagascar. The 103-year-old Merina monarchy ended with the royal family sent into exile in [[Algeria]]. |
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===International recognition and modernization of the Kingdom (1817–1895)=== |
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The kingdom of Madagascar continued its transformation throughout the 19th century from a locally grown monarchy into a modern [[State (polity)|state]]. |
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Before Radama I the Malagasy language was written in a script known as [[sorabe]]. In 1820 under the direction of [[David Jones (missionary)|David Jones]], a Welsh missionary of the London Missionary Society, Radama I codified the new Malagasy [[Latin script|Latin alphabet]] of 21 letters which replaced the old sorabe alphabet.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.dacb.org/stories/madagascar/jones_david.html |title=Dictionary of African Christian Biography |access-date=May 13, 2012 |archive-date=August 17, 2017 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20170817204610/http://www.dacb.org/stories/madagascar/jones_david.html |url-status=dead }}</ref> By 1830 the Bible was the first book written in this new Malagasy Latin alphabet. It is the oldest complete translation of the bible into a sub-Saharan African language. |
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The kingdom of Madagascar continued its transformation throughout the 19th century from a locally grown [[monarchy]] into a modern [[State (polity)|state]]. |
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The United States and the Kingdom of Madagascar concluded a commercial convention in 1867 after which Queen Rasoherina and Prime Minister Rainilaiarivoy exchanged gifts with president [[Andrew Johnson]].<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.nmafa.si.edu/exhibits/malagasy/queen.html |title=Objects as Envoys |access-date=May 13, 2012}}</ref> A treaty of peace, friendship, and commerce was then signed in 1881.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://2009-2017.state.gov/r/pa/ei/bgn/5460.htm |title=U.S. Department of State, Background Note: Madagascar |access-date=May 13, 2012 }}</ref> |
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Before Radama I the Malagasy language was written in a script known as [[sorabe]]. In 1820 under the direction of [[David Jones (missionary)|David Jones]], a Welsh missionary of the London Missionary Society, Radama I codified the new Malagasy [[Latin script|Latin alphabet]] of 21 letters which replaced the old sorabe alphabet<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.dacb.org/stories/madagascar/jones_david.html |title=Dictionary of African Christian Biography | accessdate=May 13, 2012}}</ref>. By 1830 the Bible was the first book written in this new Malagasy Latin alphabet. It is the oldest complete translation of the bible into a sub-Saharan African language. |
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During the reign of Ranavalona I, early attempts at industrialization took place from 1835 under the direction of the French [[Jean Laborde]] (a survivor of a shipwreck off the east coast), producing soap, [[porcelain]], metal tools and firearms (rifles, cannons, etc.).. |
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The [[United States]] and the Kingdom of Madagascar concluded a commercial convention in 1867 after which Queen Rasoherina and Prime Minister Rainilaiarivoy exchanged gifts with president [[Andrew Johnson]]<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.nmafa.si.edu/exhibits/malagasy/queen.html |title=Objects as Envoys |accessdate=May 13, 2012}}</ref>. A treaty of peace, friendship, and commerce was then signed in 1881<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.state.gov/r/pa/ei/bgn/5460.htm |title=U.S. Department of State, Background Note: Madagascar |accessdate=May 13, 2012}}</ref>. |
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In 1864 [[Antananarivo]] opened the first hospital and a modern medical school. Two years later appeared the first newspaper. A scientific journal in English (''Antananarivo Annual'') was released from 1875. In 1894, on the eve of the establishment of colonial rule, the schools of the kingdom, mainly led by the [[Protestant]] missions, were attended by over 200,000 students. |
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During the reign of Ranavalona I, early attempts at [[industrialization]] took place from 1835 under the direction of the French [[Jean Laborde]] (a survivor of a shipwreck off the east coast), producing soap, [[porcelain]], metal tools and firearms (rifles, cannons, etc.).. |
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In 1864 [[Antananarivo]] opened the first [[hospital]] and a modern medical school. Two years later appeared the first newspaper. A scientific journal in English (''Antananarivo Annual'') was released from 1875. In 1894, on the eve of the establishment of colonial rule, the schools of the kingdom, mainly led by the [[Protestant]] missions, were attended by over 200,000 students. |
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==French colonization== |
==French colonization== |
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{{See also|1904–1905 uprising in Madagascar|Madagascar in World War II|Malagasy Uprising}} |
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[[File:LaGuerreAMadagascar.jpg|thumb|Poster of the French war in Madagascar]] |
[[File:LaGuerreAMadagascar.jpg|thumb|Poster of the French war in Madagascar]] |
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In 1750, the ruler of the Kingdom of Betsimisaraka, [[Bety of Betsimisaraka]], ceded the island [[Île Sainte-Marie|Nosy Boraha (Île Sainte-Marie)]] to the [[Kingdom of France]]. However, in 1752 the French Colonists were massacred when the local population rebelled. France left the settlement abandoned for roughly half a century until returning in 1818.<ref>{{cite web |url=https://www.princesse-bora.com/history-sainte-marie/ |title = History of the Sainte-Marie island {{!}} Princesse Bora Lodge & Spa}}</ref> |
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The British accepts in the [[Treaty of Berlin (1885)|Berlin Treaty]] the claims of France to exert its influence on Madagascar and a treaty of alliance between France and [[Malagasy Republic|Malagasy]] was signed in December 17, 1885 by Queen [[Ranavalona III]]. |
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In 1840 [[Tsiomeko of Boina|Tsiomeko]], the ruler of [[Nosy Be]] island, accepted French protection in 1840. The French took possession of the island in 1841, and in 1849 an unsuccessful attempt was made to expel them.<ref>[https://theodora.com/encyclopedia/n/nossibe.html Nossi-Be]</ref> |
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Disagreements on the implementation of this treaty, serve as a pretext for the French invasion of 1895, which first met little resistance. The authority of the Prime Minister [[Rainilaiarivony]], in power since 1864, had indeed become very unpopular with the public. |
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In the [[Treaty of Berlin (1885)|Berlin Treaty]], the British accepted the claims of France to exert its influence on Madagascar, and after [[First Madagascar expedition|the first Franco-Hova War]]a treaty of alliance between France and [[Madagascar]] was signed on 17 December 1885 by Queen [[Ranavalona III]], granting France a protectorate over the [[Antsiranana|Diego-Suarez bay and surrounding territory]], as well as the islands of Nosy-Be and Île Sainte-Marie. |
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The intention of the French was to first establish a simple [[protectorate]] system, affecting especially the control of the economy and foreign relations of the island. But later, the outbreak of the popular resistance of [[Menalamba]] and the arrival of General [[Joseph Gallieni|Gallieni]] responsible "pacify" the country 1896 lead to the annexation and the exile of the queen [[Algeria]]. |
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Disagreements on the implementation of this treaty served as a pretext for the French invasion of 1895, which first met little resistance. The authority of the prime minister [[Rainilaiarivony]], in power since 1864, had become very unpopular with the public. |
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The British accepted the imposition of a French [[Malagasy Protectorate|protectorate]] over Madagascar in 1890 in return for eventual British control over [[Zanzibar]] (subsequently part of [[Tanzania]]) and as part of an overall definition of spheres of influence in the area.<ref> |
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See Allen and Covell, ''Historical Dictionary of Madagascar,'' pgs. xxx–xxxi |
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</ref> |
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The British accepted the imposition of a French [[Malagasy Protectorate|protectorate]] over Madagascar in 1890 in return for recognition of British sovereignty over [[Sultanate of Zanzibar|Zanzibar]] (subsequently part of [[Tanzania]]) and as part of an overall definition of spheres of influence in the area.<ref>See Allen and Covell, ''Historical Dictionary of Madagascar'', pgs. xxx–xxxi</ref> The intention of the French was initially to maintain the protectorate in order to control the economy and foreign relations of the island. But later, the outbreak of the [[Menalamba rebellion]] and the arrival of General [[Joseph Gallieni|Gallieni]] (responsible for "pacifying" the country) in 1896 led to the [[French Madagascar|colonization of the island]] and the exile of the queen to [[Algeria]]. |
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Malagasy troops fought in [[France]], [[Morocco]], and [[Syria]] during [[World War II]]. After France fell to the [[Germany|Germans]] in 1940, the [[Vichy France|Vichy]] government administered Madagascar until 1942, when British Empire troops occupied the strategic island in the [[Battle of Madagascar]] in order to preclude its seizure by the [[Japan]]ese. The [[United Kingdom]] handed over control of the island to [[Free French Forces]] in 1943. |
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In 1904–1905 Madagascar was the scene of a [[1904–1905 uprising in Madagascar|large-scale uprising by various tribes and tribal leaders]], among whom Kotavy, a former French corporal who defected to the rebels, filled a preponderant role.<ref name=":0">{{Cite journal|last=Mutibwa|first=Phares M.|date=1980|journal=Transafrican Journal of History|volume=9|issue=1/2|pages=134–152|issn=0251-0391|jstor=24328554|title=Resistance to Colonialism: The Revolt of 1904—5 in South-East Madagascar}}</ref> |
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==Revolt and Decolonisation 1947-1960== |
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In 1947, with French prestige at a low ebb, the French government, headed by Prime Minister [[Paul Ramadier]] of the [[French Section of the Workers' International]] (SFIO) party, suppressed the [[Madagascar revolt]], a nationalist uprising. Between 80,000 to 90,000 Malagasy were killed during a year of bitter fighting.<ref> |
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[http://www.afrik.com/article8073.html The Malagasy "pacification" of 1947 resulted in 89 000 deaths] (In French, ''[http://babelfish.altavista.com/babelfish/trurl_pagecontent?lp=fr_en&trurl=http%3a%2f%2fwww.afrik.com%2farticle8073.html translation]'') |
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</ref> |
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Malagasy troops fought in France, [[Morocco]], and [[Syria]] during [[World War II]]. Prior to the implementation of the [[Final Solution]], [[Nazi Germany]] had considered the [[Madagascar Plan]], which would have relocated [[European Jews]] to Madagascar. After France fell to the Germans in 1940, the [[Vichy France|Vichy]] government administered Madagascar until 1942, when British and [[Commonwealth of Nations|Commonwealth]] troops occupied the strategic island in the [[Battle of Madagascar]]. The United Kingdom handed over control of the island to [[Free French Forces]] in 1943. |
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The French subsequently established reformed institutions in 1956 under the [[Loi Cadre]] ([[Overseas Reform Act]]), and Madagascar moved peacefully toward independence. The [[Malagasy Republic]], proclaimed on October 14, 1958, became an autonomous state within the [[French Community]]. On 26 March 1960 France agreed to Madagascar becoming fully independent.<ref>http://select.nytimes.com/mem/archive/pdf?res=F50D14F935591A7A93C1A9178FD85F448685F9</ref> On 26 June 1960 Madagascar became an independent country and [[Philibert Tsiranana]] became its first President. |
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== Revolt and decolonization (1947–1960) == |
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==The independent Malagasy Republic== |
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In 1948, with French prestige at a low ebb, the French government, headed by Prime Minister [[Paul Ramadier]] of the [[French Section of the Workers' International]] (SFIO) party, suppressed the [[Madagascar revolt]], a nationalist uprising.<ref>[http://lcweb2.loc.gov/frd/cs/mgtoc.html A Country Study: Madagascar] Library of Congress</ref><ref>The Cambridge Encyclopedia of Africa (1981)</ref><ref>Dictionary of Wars, by George Childs Kohn (Facts on File, 1999)</ref><ref>"B&J": Jacob Bercovitch and Richard Jackson, International Conflict : A Chronological Encyclopedia of Conflicts and Their Management 1945–1995 (1997)</ref><ref>Hartman, T., A World Atlas of Military History 1945–1984 (1984)</ref><ref>"WHPSI": The World Handbook of Political and Social Indicators by Charles Lewis Taylor</ref> |
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=== The First Republic (1960 - 1972) === |
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Tsiranana's rule represented continuation, with French settlers (or ''colons'') still in positions of power. Unlike many of France's former colonies, the Malagasy Republic strongly resisted movements towards [[communism]].<ref name="Madagascar History">[[Lonely Planet]]: [http://www.lonelyplanet.com/worldguide/destinations/africa/madagascar/essential?a=culture Madagascar History] |
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</ref> |
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In 1972 protests against these policies came to a head and Tsiranana had to step down. He handed power to General [[Gabriel Ramanantsoa]] of the army and his provisional government. This régime reversed previous policy in favour of closer ties with the [[Soviet Union]].<ref name="Madagascar timeline">[[BBC]]: [http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/africa/country_profiles/1832645.stm Madagascar timeline] |
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</ref> |
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The French subsequently established reformed institutions in 1956 under the [[Loi Cadre]] ([[Overseas Reform Act]]), and Madagascar moved peacefully toward independence. The [[Malagasy Republic]], proclaimed on 14 October 1958, became an autonomous state within the [[French Community]]. On 26 March 1960 France agreed to Madagascar becoming fully independent.<ref>{{cite news| url=https://select.nytimes.com/mem/archive/pdf?res=F50D14F935591A7A93C1A9178FD85F448685F9 | work=The New York Times | title=MALAGASY PACT SIGNED; Gives Republic Independence Within French Community | date=3 April 1960}}</ref> On 26 June 1960 Madagascar became an independent country and [[Philibert Tsiranana]] became its first president. |
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On 5 February 1975, Colonel [[Richard Ratsimandrava]] became the President of Madagascar. After six days as head of the country, he died in an assassination while driving from the presidential palace to his home. Political power passed to [[Gilles Andriamahazo]]. |
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== Independence == |
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=== The Second Republic (1972 - 1991) === |
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===First Republic (1960–1972)=== |
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Tsiranana's rule represented continuation, with French settlers (or ''colons'') still in positions of power. Unlike many of France's former colonies, the Malagasy Republic strongly resisted movements towards [[communism]].<ref name="Madagascar History">[[Lonely Planet]]: [http://www.lonelyplanet.com/worldguide/destinations/africa/madagascar/essential?a=culture Madagascar History] {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20071018084325/http://www.lonelyplanet.com/worldguide/destinations/africa/madagascar/essential?a=culture |date=18 October 2007 }}</ref> |
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In 1972, protests against these policies came to a head and Tsiranana had to step down. He handed power to General [[Gabriel Ramanantsoa]] of the army and his provisional government. This régime reversed previous policy in favour of closer ties with the [[Soviet Union]].<ref name="Madagascar timeline">[[BBC]]: [http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/africa/country_profiles/1832645.stm Madagascar timeline]</ref> |
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On 15 June 1975 Lieutenant-Commander [[Didier Ratsiraka]] (who had previously served as foreign minister) came to power in a coup. Elected president for a seven-year term, Ratsiraka moved further towards [[socialism]], nationalising much of the economy and cutting all ties with France.<ref name="Madagascar timeline"/> |
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These policies hastened the decline in the Madagascan economy that had begun after independence as French immigrants left the country, leaving a shortage of skills and technology behind.<ref name="Madagascar History"/> |
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Ratsiraka's original seven-year term as President continued after his party (Avant-garde de la Révolution Malgache or AREMA) became the only legal party in the 1977 elections.<ref name="Madagascar History"/> |
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In the 1980s Madagascar moved back towards France, abandoning many of its communist-inspired policies in favour of a [[market economy]], though Ratsiraka still kept hold of power.{{Citation needed|date=November 2009}} |
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On 5 February 1975, Colonel [[Richard Ratsimandrava]] became the President of Madagascar. After six days as head of the country, he died in an assassination while driving from the presidential palace to his home. Political power passed to [[Gilles Andriamahazo]]. |
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Eventually opposition — both in Madagascar and internationally — forced him to reconsider his position, and in 1992 the country adopted a new and democratic constitution.<ref name="Madagascar timeline"/> |
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=== |
===Second Republic (1972–1991)=== |
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On 15 June 1975, Lieutenant-Commander [[Didier Ratsiraka]] (who had previously served as foreign minister) came to power in a coup. Elected president for a seven-year term, Ratsiraka moved further towards socialism, nationalising much of the economy and cutting all ties with France.<ref name="Madagascar timeline" /> These policies hastened the decline in the Madagascan economy that had begun after independence as French immigrants left the country, leaving a shortage of skills and technology behind. Ratsiraka's original seven-year term as president continued after his party (Avant-garde de la Révolution Malgache or AREMA) became the only legal party in the 1977 elections.<ref name="Madagascar History" /> |
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In the 1980s, Madagascar moved back towards France, abandoning many of its communist-inspired policies in favour of a [[market economy]], though Ratsiraka still kept hold of power.<ref name="HISTORY OF MADAGASCAR"/> |
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The first multi-party elections came in 1993, with [[Albert Zafy]] defeating Ratsiraka.<ref name="Madagascar History"/> |
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After bitter parliamentary infighting with his once ally and Prime Minister [[Francisque Ravony]], Zafy suffered [[impeachment]] in 1996 for violating the constitution by refusing to promulgate specific laws.<ref>{{cite web|title=Décision n°17-HCC/D3(Empêchement)(French)|url=http://www.hcc.gov.mg/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=112&Itemid=49|publisher=High Constitutional Court of Madagascar|accessdate=May 14, 2012}}</ref> |
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Eventually, opposition, both within and without, forced Ratsiraka to consider his position and in 1992 the country adopted a new and democratic constitution.<ref name="Madagascar timeline" /> |
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He moved further towards [[capitalism]]. The influence of the [[International Monetary Fund]] (IMF) and [[World Bank]] led to widespread [[privatisation]]. |
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===Third Republic (1991–2002)=== |
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Opposition to Ratsiraka began to grow again. Opposition parties boycotted provincial elections in 2000, and the [[Malagasy presidential election, 2001|2001 presidential election]] produced more controversy. The opposition candidate [[Marc Ravalomanana]] claimed victory after the first round (in December) but the incumbent rejected this position. In early 2002 supporters of the two sides took to the streets and violent clashes took place. Ravalomanana claimed that fraud had occurred in the polls. After an April recount the High Constitutional Court declared Ravalomanana president. Ratsiraka continued to dispute the result but his opponent gained international recognition, and Ratsiraka had to go into exile in France, though forces loyal to him continued activities in Madagascar.<ref name="Madagascar History"/> |
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The first multi-party elections came in 1993, with [[Albert Zafy]] defeating Ratsiraka.<ref name="Madagascar History" /> Despite being a strong proponent of a liberal, free-market economy, Zafy ran on a ticket critical of the [[International Monetary Fund]] (IMF) and the [[World Bank]]. During his presidency the country struggled to implement IMF and World Bank guidelines that were, on the short term, suicidal politically.<ref name="Structural Adjustment in MADAGASCAR">{{cite web|title=Structural Adjustment in MADAGASCAR|url=http://www.wildmadagascar.org/overview/loc/33-structural_adjustment.html|publisher=Wildmadagascar.org|access-date=August 6, 2012}}</ref> |
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As president Zafy was frustrated by the restraints placed upon the powers of his office by the new constitution. His quest for increased executive power put him on a collision course with the parliament led by then prime minister [[Francisque Ravony]].<ref name=ISS>Richard R. Marcus, [http://www.iss.org.za/pubs/papers/89/Paper89.htm "Political change in Madagascar: populist democracy or neopatrimonialism by another name?"] {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120205204247/http://www.iss.org.za/pubs/papers/89/Paper89.htm |date=February 5, 2012 }}, Institute for Security Studies, Occasional Paper 89, August 2004.</ref> Zafy eventually won the power he sought after but suffered [[impeachment]] at the hands of the disenfranchised parliament in 1996 for violating the constitution by refusing to promulgate specific laws.<ref>{{cite web|title=Décision n°17-HCC/D3(Empêchement)(French)|url=http://www.hcc.gov.mg/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=112&Itemid=49|publisher=High Constitutional Court of Madagascar|access-date=May 14, 2012}}</ref> |
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=== The Post Ratsiraka Years (2002 - ) === |
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The ensuing elections saw a turnout of less than 50% and unexpectedly resulted in the re-election of Didier Ratsiraka.<ref name="Madagascar timeline" /> |
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Ravlomanana's [[I Love Madagascar]] party achieved overwhelming electoral success in December 2001 and he survived an attempted coup in January 2003. He used his mandate to work closely with the IMF and the World Bank to reform the economy, to end corruption and to realise the country's potential.<ref name="Madagascar History"/> |
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He moved further towards capitalism. The influence of the IMF and the World Bank led to widespread [[privatisation]]. |
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Opposition to Ratsiraka began to grow again. Opposition parties boycotted provincial elections in 2000, and the [[Malagasy presidential election, 2001|2001 presidential election]] produced more controversy. The opposition candidate [[Marc Ravalomanana]] claimed victory after the first round (in December) but the incumbent rejected this position. In early 2002 supporters of the two sides took to the streets and violent clashes took place. Ravalomanana claimed that fraud had occurred in the polls. After an April recount the High Constitutional Court declared Ravalomanana president. Ratsiraka continued to dispute the result but his opponent gained international recognition, and Ratsiraka had to go into exile in France, though forces loyal to him continued activities in Madagascar.<ref name="Madagascar History" /> |
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===Post-Ratsiraka=== |
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Ravalomanana's [[Tiako I Madagasikara]] party achieved overwhelming electoral success in December 2001 and he survived an attempted coup in January 2003. He used his mandate to work closely with the IMF and the World Bank to reform the economy, to end corruption and to realise the country's potential.<ref name="Madagascar History" /> |
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Ratsiraka went on trial (''in absentia'') for [[embezzlement]] (the authorities charged him with taking $8m of public money with him into exile) and the court sentenced him to ten years' [[hard labour]].<ref>[[BBC News]]: [http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/africa/3129993.stm Ratsiraka gets 10 years hard labor]</ref> |
Ratsiraka went on trial (''in absentia'') for [[embezzlement]] (the authorities charged him with taking $8m of public money with him into exile) and the court sentenced him to ten years' [[hard labour]].<ref>[[BBC News]]: [http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/africa/3129993.stm Ratsiraka gets 10 years hard labor]</ref> |
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Ravalomanana is credited with improving the country's infrastructure, such as roads, along with making improvements in education and health, but has faced criticism for his lack of progress against poverty; [[purchasing power]] is said to have declined during his time in office.<ref>[http://www.irinnews.org/Report.aspx?ReportId=62258 "Opinion divided over Ravalomanana"], ''[[IRIN]]'', |
Ravalomanana is credited with improving the country's infrastructure, such as roads, along with making improvements in education and health, but has faced criticism for his lack of progress against poverty; [[purchasing power]] is said to have declined during his time in office.<ref>[http://www.irinnews.org/Report.aspx?ReportId=62258 "Opinion divided over Ravalomanana"], ''[[The New Humanitarian|IRIN]]'', 1 December 2006.</ref><ref>[http://www.irinnews.org/Report.aspx?ReportId=62266 "Voter apathy as election day approaches"], ''[[The New Humanitarian|IRIN]]'', 1 December 2006.</ref> On 18 November 2006, his plane was forced to divert from Madagascar's capital during a return trip from Europe following reports of [[2006 Malagasy coup d'état attempt|a coup]] underway in Antananarivo and shooting near the airport;<ref>Johnny Hogg, [http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/africa/6161398.stm "Madagascar general urges overthrow"], BBC News, November 18, 2006.</ref> however, this alleged coup attempt was unsuccessful. |
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Ravalomanana ran for a second term in the [[Malagasy presidential election, 2006|presidential election]] held on December 3, 2006.<ref name=Likely>[http://www.irinnews.org/Report.aspx?ReportId=62418 "Ravalomanana likely to win presidential election"], ''[[IRIN]]'', |
Ravalomanana ran for a second term in the [[Malagasy presidential election, 2006|presidential election]] held on December 3, 2006.<ref name=Likely>[http://www.irinnews.org/Report.aspx?ReportId=62418 "Ravalomanana likely to win presidential election"] {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120220193110/http://www.irinnews.org/Report.aspx?ReportId=62418 |date=20 February 2012 }}, ''[[The New Humanitarian|IRIN]]'', 11 December 2006.</ref> According to official results, he won the election with 54.79% of the vote in the first round; his best results were in [[Antananarivo Province]], where he received the support of 75.39% of voters.<ref>[http://www.hcc.gov.mg/election-2006/resultat-2006.php 2006 presidential election results] {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120414171605/http://www.hcc.gov.mg/election-2006/resultat-2006.php |date=April 14, 2012 }} from the High Constitutional Court {{in lang|fr}}.</ref> He was sworn in for his second term on January 19, 2007.<ref>[http://news.xinhuanet.com/english/2007-01/20/content_5628465.htm "Ravalomanana swears in as Malagasy President"] {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120331230249/http://news.xinhuanet.com/english/2007-01/20/content_5628465.htm |date=31 March 2012 }}, ''[[Xinhua News Agency]]'', 19 January 2007.</ref> |
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Ravalomanana dissolved the National Assembly in July 2007, prior to the end of its term, following a [[Malagasy constitutional referendum, 2007|constitutional referendum]] earlier in the year. Ravalomanana said that [[Malagasy parliamentary election, 2007|a new election]] needed to be held so that the National Assembly would reflect the changes made in this referendum.<ref>[http://www.int.iol.co.za/index.php?set_id=1&click_id=84&art_id=nw20070724185451112C982662 "Madagascar leader dissolves parliament"], [[Agence France Presse|AFP]] (''IOL''), |
Ravalomanana dissolved the National Assembly in July 2007, prior to the end of its term, following a [[Malagasy constitutional referendum, 2007|constitutional referendum]] earlier in the year. Ravalomanana said that [[Malagasy parliamentary election, 2007|a new election]] needed to be held so that the National Assembly would reflect the changes made in this referendum.<ref>[http://www.int.iol.co.za/index.php?set_id=1&click_id=84&art_id=nw20070724185451112C982662 "Madagascar leader dissolves parliament"], [[Agence France Presse|AFP]] (''IOL''), 24 July 2007.</ref> |
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He became involved in a political standoff after he closed the TV station belonging to [[Antananarivo]] mayor [[Andry Rajoelina]]. In January 2009, [[2009 Malagasy protests|protests which then turned violent]] were organized and spearheaded by [[Andry Rajoelina]], the mayor of the capital city of [[Antananarivo]] and a prominent opponent of President Ravalomanana.<ref name=france24>{{cite news|first=Catherine|last=Norris Trent|title=Antananarivo almost a ghost town after protests|url=http://www.france24.com/en/20090129-capital-becomes-ghost-town-after-protests-madagascar-mayor|agency=[[Agence France-Presse]]|publisher=[[France 24]]|date=29 January 2008|access-date=29 January 2009|url-status=dead|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20090201071733/http://www.france24.com/en/20090129-capital-becomes-ghost-town-after-protests-madagascar-mayor|archive-date=1 February 2009}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url = https://www.google.com/hostednews/ap/article/ALeqM5hfV75EHUookBtBk2OlprGZBpDTzgD9607AL04|archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20090202084626/http://www.google.com/hostednews/ap/article/ALeqM5hfV75EHUookBtBk2OlprGZBpDTzgD9607AL04|url-status = dead|archive-date = February 2, 2009|title = 43 killed in Madagascar political violence|agency = Associated Press|date = 28 January 2009}}</ref> |
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He is currently involved in a political standoff after he closed the TV station belonging to [[Antananarivo]] mayor [[Andry Rajoelina]]. |
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The situation fundamentally changed on 10 March 2009 when army leaders forced the recently appointed defense secretary to resign (the previous one had decided to resign after the killings by the presidential guard on 7 February 2009). They also announced that they gave the opponents 72 hours to dialogue and find a solution to the crisis before they would take further action. This move came after the leaders of the main military camp had announced a day earlier that they would not execute orders coming from the presidency any more since their duty was to protect the people, and not to oppress them, as groups of the military had done over the last few days.<ref>[http://www.rfi.fr/actufr/articles/111/article_79110.asp "Army calls politicians to find solution"], ["RFI, in french"], 11 March 2009.</ref><ref>[http://allafrica.com/stories/200903100624.html "Madagascar: Army Threatens to Intervene"], ["Allafrica"], 11 March 2009.</ref> |
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In January 2009 [[2009 Malagasy protests|protests which then turned violent]] were organized and spearheaded by [[Andry Rajoelina]], the mayor of the capital city of [[Antananarivo]] and a prominent opponent of President Ravalomanana.<ref name=france24>{{cite news|first=Catherine|last=Norris Trent|title=Antananarivo almost a ghost town after protests|url=http://www.france24.com/en/20090129-capital-becomes-ghost-town-after-protests-madagascar-mayor|agency=[[Agence France-Presse]]|publisher=[[France 24]]|date=2008-01-29|accessdate=2009-01-29}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url = http://www.google.com/hostednews/ap/article/ALeqM5hfV75EHUookBtBk2OlprGZBpDTzgD9607AL04|title = 43 killed in Madagascar political violence|publisher = Associated Press,|date = 28 January 2009}}</ref> |
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On 16 March 2009, the army seized the presidential palace in the centre of Antananarivo. Ravalomanana was not in the palace at the time.<ref>{{cite news |title=Madagascar soldiers seize palace |publisher=BBC|date=16 March 2009|access-date=16 March 2009 |url=http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/africa/7946741.stm }}</ref> He handed his resignation to the army, which then decided to hand over power to his fierce political rival, [[Andry Rajoelina]]. The second round of the postponed [[2013 Malagasy general election|presidential elections]] was held in December 2013 and the results were announced in January 2014. The winner and the next president was [[Hery Rajaonarimampianina]]. He was backed by Rajoelina who led the 2009 coup and still was very influential political figure.<ref>{{Cite news|url=https://www.nytimes.com/2014/01/04/world/africa/madagascar-election-results-released.html|title = Madagascar: Election Results Released|newspaper = The New York Times|date = 4 January 2014}}</ref><ref>{{Cite news|url=https://www.bbc.com/news/world-africa-24661607|title = Madagascar holds long-awaited presidential elections|work = BBC News|date = 25 October 2013}}</ref> |
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The situation has fundamentally changed on March 10, 2009 when army leaders forced the recently appointed defence secretary to resign (the previous one had decided to resign after the killings by the presidential guard on February 7, 2009). They also announced that they gave the opponents 72 hours to dialogue and find a solution to the crisis before they would take further action. This move came after the leaders of the main military camp had announced a day earlier that they would not execute orders coming from the presidency any more since their duty was to protect the people, and not to oppress them, as groups of the military had done over the last few days.<ref>[http://www.rfi.fr/actufr/articles/111/article_79110.asp "Army calls politicians to find solution"], ["RFI, in french"], March 11, 2009.</ref><ref>[http://allafrica.com/stories/200903100624.html "Madagascar: Army Threatens to Intervene"], ["Allafrica"], March 11, 2009.</ref> |
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In 2018 the first round of the [[2018 Malagasy presidential election|presidential election]] was held on 7 November and the second round was held on 10 December. Three former presidents and the most recent president were the main candidates of the elections. Former president Andry Rajoelina won the second round of the elections. He was previously president from 2009 to 2014. Former president Marc Ravalomanana lost the second round and he did not accept the results because of allegations of fraud. Ravalomanana was president from 2002 to 2009. The most recent president Hery Rajaonarimampianina received very modest support in the first round. In January 2019 the High Constitutional Court declared Rajoelina as the winner of the elections and the new president.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.aljazeera.com/news/2018/11/6/madagascar-presidential-election-what-you-need-to-know|title = All you need to know about high-stakes Madagascar poll}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.aljazeera.com/news/2019/1/8/madagascar-court-declares-rajoelina-as-election-winner|title = Madagascar court declares Rajoelina as election winner}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.africanews.com/2018/12/28/madagascar-starts-voting-in-tight-presidential-race/|title=Madagascar: Ravalomanana challenges results in court, Rajoelina calls for calm|date=28 December 2018}}</ref> |
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On 16 March, the army seized the presidential palace in the centre of Antananarivo. Ravalomanana was not in the palace at the time.<ref>{{cite news |title=Madagascar soldiers seize palace |work=BBC |date=16 March|accessdate=16 March 2009 |url=http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/africa/7946741.stm }}</ref> He finally handed his resignation to the army. However, the army have decided to hand over power to his fierce political rival. |
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In 2019, an [[Epidemiology of measles|epidemic of measles]] killed 1,200 people.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://apnews.com/0cd4deb8141742b5903fbef3cb0e8afa|title=Measles outbreak kills more than 1,200 in Madagascar|last=Bezain|first=Laetitia|date=14 April 2019|website=AP NEWS|access-date=15 April 2019}}</ref> |
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==See also== |
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*[[Ethnic groups of Madagascar]] |
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*[[History of Africa]] |
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*[[History of Southern Africa]] |
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*[[List of Malagasy monarchs]] |
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*[[List of Presidents of Madagascar]] |
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*[[Madagascar]] |
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*[[Politics of Madagascar]] |
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In 2021, Madagascar's [[2021 Madagascar food crisis|worst drought in 40 years]] left more than a million people in southern Madagascar food insecure. This forced thousands of people to leave their homes to search for food.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.theguardian.com/global-development/2021/may/10/at-least-1m-people-facing-starvation-madagascar-drought-worsens|title=At least 1m people facing starvation as Madagascar's drought worsens|date=10 May 2021|website=The Guardian|access-date=24 July 2021}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=https://news.un.org/en/story/2021/06/1094632|title=Madagascar's hungry 'holding on for dear life', WFP chief warns|date=23 June 2021|website=UN News|access-date=24 July 2021}}</ref> |
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==Footnotes== |
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{{Reflist}} |
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In November 2023, [[Andry Rajoelina]] was re-elected to another term with 58.95% of the vote in the first round of the [[2023 Malagasy presidential election|election]]. Turnout was 46.36%, the lowest in a presidential election in the country's history.<ref>{{cite web |date=25 November 2023 |title=Andry Rajoelina: Madagascar president re-elected in contested poll |url=https://www.bbc.com/news/world-africa-67517143 |access-date=26 November 2023 |work=BBC News}}</ref> |
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==References== |
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== See also == |
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* Rabarioelina, Ndriana (Rev. Dr.) (2010), "Biblical Relations between Israel and Madagascar", Doctoral Thesis of Theology, SAHTS, États-Unis, 2010, 458 pages. Abstract in Saint-Alcuin House Journal, Volume 8, N°1, USA, 2011. And in Library of Congress, number ISSN 1548-4459, USA. |
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* [[Ethnic groups of Madagascar]] |
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* Charlotte Liliane Rabesahala-Randriamananoro, Ambohimanga-Rova : approche anthropologique de la civilisation merina (Madagascar), Paris, Le Publieur, 2006, 393 p. (ISBN 2-85194-307-3. Texte remanié d’une thèse soutenue à l’Université de La Réunion en 2002. (French) |
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* [[History of Africa]] |
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* Rajaonarimanana, Narivelo (1990), Savoirs arabico-malgaches : la tradition manuscrite des devins Antemoro Anakara (Madagascar), Institut national des langues et civilisations orientales. (French) |
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* [[History of Southern Africa]] |
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* Ramamonjy, Georges (1952), "De quelques attitudes et coutumes merina", dans Mémoires de l'Institut scientifique de Madagascar (Tananarive), série C, Sciences humaines, 1 (2), 1952, p. 181-196. (French) |
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* [[List of Imerina monarchs]] |
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* Ramilison, Emmanuel (Pastor) (1951), Andriantomara-Andriamamilazabe. Loharanon' ny Andriana nanjaka eto Imerina, Imprimerie Ankehitriny. (Malagasy) |
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* [[List of presidents of Madagascar]] |
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* Randrianja Solofo, Ellis Stephen (2009), Madagascar. A short history, London, Hurst & Company, 2009. |
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* [[Politics of Madagascar]] |
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* Raombana (l'historien) (1809–1855), "Histoires", Edition Ambozontany, Fianarantsoa, 3 Volumes. (French) |
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* Antananarivo [[Antananarivo#History|history]] and [[Timeline of Antananarivo|timeline]] |
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* Rasamimanana, Joseph (Dr.) (1909) et Louis de Gonzague Razafindrazaka (Governor), Ny Andriantompokoindrindra, Antananarivo, 50 pages. (Malagasy) |
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* Ravelojaona (Pastor) (1937–1970), Firaketana ny Fiteny sy ny Zavatra Malagasy, Encyclopedic Dictionary, Antananarivo, 5 Volumes. (Malagasy) |
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== Footnotes == |
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* Razafindrazaka, Harilanto, et alii (2009) "A new deep branch of eurasian mtDNA macrohaplogroup M reveals additional complexity regarding the settlement of Madagascar", BMC Genomics. |
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{{reflist |
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* Rombaka, Jacques Philippe (1963), Tantaran-drazana Antemoro-Anteony, Antananarivo, Imprimerie LMS, pp. 10–11. (French) |
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| refs = |
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* Rombaka, Jacques Philippe (1970), Fomban-drazana Antemoro - usages et coutumes antemoro, Ambozontany, Fianarantsoa, 121 p. (French) |
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<ref name="Gade 1996">{{cite journal| doi = 10.2307/3674005| last = Gade| first = Daniel W.| title = Deforestation and its effects in Highland Madagascar| journal = Mountain Research and Development| volume = 16| issue = 2| year = 1996| pages = 101–116| jstor = 3674005}}</ref> |
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* Rebecca L. Green: Merina. The Rosen Publishing Group, New York, 1997, ISBN 0-8239-1991-9 (The heritage library of African peoples). Google Books |
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}} |
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* Matthew E. Hules, et al. (2005). The Dual Origin of the Malagasy in Island Southeast Asia and East Africa: Evidence from Maternal and Paternal Lineages. American Journal of Human Genetics, 76:894–901, 2005. |
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* Mervyn Brown (2000). A History of Madagascar. Princeton: Markus Wiener Publishers. ISBN 1-55876-292-2. |
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== References == |
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* Stephen Ellis and Solofo Randrianja, Madagascar – A short history, London, 2009 |
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===in English=== |
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<!--alphabetical by last name--> |
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* Allen, Philip M. & Maureen Covell (2005). ''Historical Dictionary of Madagascar'' 2nd ed. Lanham, Maryland: Scarecrow Press. {{ISBN|0-8108-4636-5}}. |
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* Allen, Philip M. (1995). ''Madagascar: Conflicts of Authority in the Great Island''. Boulder, Colorado: Westview Press. {{ISBN|0-8133-0258-7}}. |
|||
* Blench, Roger, [https://web.archive.org/web/20101225175801/http://www.rogerblench.info/Ethnomusicology%20data/Papers/Asia/General/Roger%20Blench%20AN%20music%20II%20paper%20submit.pdf "Musical instruments and musical practices as markers of Austronesian expansion"], 18th Congress of the Indo-Pacific Prehistory Association, Manila, March 26, 2006. |
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* Brown Mervyn (1978) ''Madagascar Rediscovered: A history from early times to independence'' |
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* Brown, M. (1978) Madagascar Rediscovered: A History from Early Times to Independence (London: Damien Tunnacliff) |
* Brown, M. (1978) Madagascar Rediscovered: A History from Early Times to Independence (London: Damien Tunnacliff) |
||
* Burney, D.A., L.P. Burney, L.R. Godfrey, W.L. Jungers, S.M. Goodman, H.T. Wright, and A.J. Jull. 2004. [https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/15288523 "A chronology for late prehistoric Madagascar"], Journal of Human Evolution, 47, 25–63. |
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* Campbell, G. (1981) Madagascar and slave trade, 1850–1895, JAH |
* Campbell, G. (1981) Madagascar and slave trade, 1850–1895, JAH |
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* Colby, Reginald. "Madagascar: The Great Island" ''History Today'' (Jan 1962) 12#1 pp 33–41 |
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* Dahl, Otto Christian, ''[https://books.google.com/books?id=D4eRAAAAIAAJ&q=dahl+migration+kalimantan Migration from Kalimantan to Madagascar]'', Oslo, Norwegian University Press, 1991. ({{ISBN|82-00-21140-1}}) |
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* Edkvist, Ingela, [https://books.google.com/books?id=mhxlAAAAMAAJ&q=improvisation ''The performance of tradition: an ethnography of Hira Gasy popular theatre in Madagascar''], Dept. of Cultural Anthropology and Ethnology, Uppsala University, 1997. |
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* Hagelberg ''et alii'', [https://web.archive.org/web/20120330232600/http://anthro.unige.ch/~sanchez-mazas/phm/27HAGELBERG_CHAP16-OK--------COLOUR-PLATE-TO-ADD.pdf "A genetic perspective on the origins and dispersal of the Austronesians. Mitochondrial DNA variation from Madagascar to Easter islands"] |
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* Jones, Arthur M., [https://books.google.com/books?id=-isMAQAAIAAJ&q=sachs%20curt%20instruments%20musique%20madagascar ''Africa and Indonesia. The Evidence Of The Xylophone And Other Musical And Cultural Factors''], Leiden, E.J.Brill, 1971. |
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* Kent, Raymond K., ''From Madagascar to the Malagasy Republic'', Greenwood Press, 1962. {{ISBN|0-8371-8421-5}} |
|||
* Rabarioelina, Ndriana (Rev. Dr.) (2010), "Biblical Relations between Israel and Madagascar", Doctoral Thesis of Theology, SAHTS, États-Unis, 2010, 458 pages. Abstract in Saint-Alcuin House Journal, Volume 8, N°1, USA, 2011. And in Library of Congress, number {{ISSN|1548-4459}}, USA. |
|||
* Randrianja Solofo, Ellis Stephen (2009), Madagascar. A short history, London, Hurst & Company, 2009. |
|||
* Razafindrazaka, Harilanto, et alii (2009) "A new deep branch of Eurasian mtDNA macrohaplogroup M reveals additional complexity regarding the settlement of Madagascar", BMC Genomics. |
|||
* Rebecca L. Green: Merina. The Rosen Publishing Group, New York, 1997, {{ISBN|0-8239-1991-9}} (The heritage library of African peoples). Google Books |
|||
* Schmidhoffer, August, [http://www.scu.edu.tw/music/2005ifet/3e.pdf «Some Remarks On The Austronesian Background of Malagasy Music »], 2005. |
|||
* Stephen Ellis and Solofo Randrianja, Madagascar – A short history, London, 2009 |
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* Thompson, V. (1965) The Malagasy Republic: Madagascar today. Stanford University Press. |
* Thompson, V. (1965) The Malagasy Republic: Madagascar today. Stanford University Press. |
||
* [[Adelaar]], K.A (2006), [https://web.archive.org/web/20080828022131/http://www.santafe.edu/events/workshops/images/6/6d/IndonesianMigrations.pdf "The Indonesian migrations to Madagascar: Making sense of the multidisciplinary evidence"], in Adelaar, Austronesian diaspora and the ethnogenesis of people in Indonesian Archipelago, LIPI PRESS. |
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* [[Mervyn Brown]] (2000). A History of Madagascar. Princeton: Markus Wiener Publishers. {{ISBN|1-55876-292-2}}. |
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* [[Peter Bellwood|Bellwood, Peter]], James J. Fox et [[Darrell Tryon]] (éds.), ''The Austronesians Historical and Comparative Perspectives'', Australian National University, 2006 |
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* {{cite book |series= [[General History of Africa]] |publisher= [[UNESCO]] |volume= 6 |chapter-url= http://www.unesco.org/new/index.php?id=50856 |title= Africa in the Nineteenth Century until the 1880s |editor= [[J. F. Ade Ajayi]] |isbn= 978-0435948122 |year= 1989 |chapter= Madagascar 1800-80 |author= Mutibwa, P.M. |pages= [https://archive.org/details/generalhistoryof00unes/page/412 412+] |url-access= registration |url= https://archive.org/details/generalhistoryof00unes/page/412 }} {{free access}} |
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* {{cite journal|last1=Hurles|first1=Matthew E.|last2=Sykes|first2=Bryan C.|last3=Jobling|first3=Mark A.|last4=Forster|first4=Peter|title=The Dual Origin of the Malagasy in Island Southeast Asia and East Africa: Evidence from Maternal and Paternal Lineages|journal=The American Journal of Human Genetics|date=May 2005|volume=76|issue=5|pages=894–901|doi=10.1086/430051|pmid=15793703|pmc=1199379}} |
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* {{cite journal|last1=Hurles|first1=Matthew E.|last2=Sykes|first2=Bryan C.|last3=Jobling|first3=Mark A.|last4=Forster|first4=Peter|title=The Dual Origin of the Malagasy in Island Southeast Asia and East Africa: Evidence from Maternal and Paternal Lineages|journal=The American Journal of Human Genetics|date=May 2005|volume=76|issue=5|pages=894–901|doi=10.1086/430051|pmid=15793703|pmc=1199379}} ({{ISSN|0002-9297}}) |
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===in French=== |
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* {{en}} [[Adelaar]], K.A (2006), [http://www.santafe.edu/events/workshops/images/6/6d/IndonesianMigrations.pdf "The Indonesian migrations to Madagascar: Making sense of the multidisciplinary evidence"], in Adelaar, Austronesian diaspora and the ethnogenesis of people in Indonesian Archipelago, LIPI PRESS. |
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<!--alphabetical by last name--> |
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* {{en}} Allen, Philip M. & Maureen Covell (2005). ''Historical Dictionary of Madagascar'' 2nd ed. Lanham, Maryland: Scarecrow Press. ISBN 0-8108-4636-5. |
|||
* Charlotte Liliane Rabesahala-Randriamananoro, Ambohimanga-Rova : approche anthropologique de la civilisation merina (Madagascar), Paris, Le Publieur, 2006, 393 p. ({{ISBN|2-85194-307-3}}. Texte remanié d’une thèse soutenue à l’Université de La Réunion en 2002. (French) |
|||
* {{en}} Allen, Philip M. (1995). ''Madagascar: Conflicts of Authority in the Great Island''. Boulder, Colorado: Westview Press. ISBN 0-8133-0258-7. |
|||
* Rajaonarimanana, Narivelo (1990), Savoirs arabico-malgaches : la tradition manuscrite des devins Antemoro Anakara (Madagascar), Institut national des langues et civilisations orientales. (French) |
|||
* {{en}} Brown Mervyn (1978) ''Madagascar Rediscovered: A history from early times to independence'' |
|||
* Ramamonjy, Georges (1952), "De quelques attitudes et coutumes merina", dans Mémoires de l'Institut scientifique de Madagascar (Tananarive), série C, Sciences humaines, 1 (2), 1952, p. 181–196. (French) |
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* {{fr}} [[Marcel de Coppet|de Coppet, Marcel]], ''Madagascar'', Paris, Encyclopédie de l'Empire français, 2 vol. 1947 |
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* Raombana (l'historien) (1809–1855), "Histoires", Edition Ambozontany, Fianarantsoa, 3 Volumes. (French) |
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* [[Peter Bellwood|Bellwood, Peter]], James J. Fox et Darrell Tryon (éds.), ''The Austronesians Historical and Comparative Perspectives'', Australian National University, 2006 |
|||
* Rombaka, Jacques Philippe (1963), Tantaran-drazana Antemoro-Anteony, Antananarivo, Imprimerie LMS, pp. 10–11. (French) |
|||
* {{en}} Blench, Roger, [http://www.rogerblench.info/Ethnomusicology%20data/Papers/Asia/General/Roger%20Blench%20AN%20music%20II%20paper%20submit.pdf « Musical instruments and musical pratices as markers of austronesian expansion »], 18th Congress of the Indo-Pacific Prehistory Association, Manila, 26 March 2006. {{plume}} |
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* Rombaka, Jacques Philippe (1970), Fomban-drazana Antemoro – usages et coutumes antemoro, Ambozontany, Fianarantsoa, 121 p. (French) |
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* {{en}} Burney, D.A., L.P. Burney, L.R. Godfrey, W.L. Jungers, S.M. Goodman, H.T. Wright, and A.J. Jull. 2004. [http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/15288523 « A chronology for late prehistoric Madagascar »], Journal of Human Evolution, 47, 25-63. {{plume}} |
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* {{in lang|fr}} [[Marcel de Coppet|de Coppet, Marcel]], ''Madagascar'', Paris, Encyclopédie de l'Empire français, 2 vol. 1947 |
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* {{en}} Dahl, Otto Christian, ''[http://books.google.com/books?id=D4eRAAAAIAAJ&q=dahl+migration+kalimantan&dq=dahl+migration+kalimantan&hl=fr&ei=UoZTToG2GY3HtAbl7v3wDw&sa=X&oi=book_result&ct=result&resnum=1&ved=0CCoQ6AEwAA Migration from Kalimantan to Madagascar]'', Oslo, Norwegian University Press, 1991. (ISBN 82-00-21140-1) {{plume}} |
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* {{fr}} Deschamps, Hubert, '' |
* {{in lang|fr}} Deschamps, Hubert, ''Madagascar'', Paris: Presses Universitaires de France, 1976. |
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* {{fr}} Domenichini-Ramiaramana, Michel, ''Instruments de musique des Hautes-Terres de Madagascar'', |
* {{in lang|fr}} Domenichini-Ramiaramana, Michel, ''Instruments de musique des Hautes-Terres de Madagascar'', Master's thesis Paris 1982. |
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* {{in lang|fr}} Fremigacci, Jean "La vérité sur la grande révolte de Madagascar", dans ''L’Histoire'' n°318, mars 2007, p. 36–43 |
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* {{en}} Edkvist, Ingela, [http://books.google.com/books?ei=xU9CTqPHI4qk8QOSq7ynCQ&ct=result&id=mhxlAAAAMAAJ&dq=vakodrazana&q=improvisation#search_anchor ''The performance of tradition: an ethnography of Hira Gasy popular theatre in Madagascar''], Dept. of Cultural Anthropology and Ethnology, Uppsala University, 1997. {{plume}} |
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* {{in lang|fr}} Ricaut ''et alii'' (2009) A new deep branch of Eurasian mtDNA macrohaplogroup M reveals additional complexity regarding the settlement of Madagascar, ''BMC Genomics'' |
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* {{fr}} Fremigacci, Jean « La vérité sur la grande révolte de Madagascar », dans ''L’Histoire'' n°318, mars 2007, p. 36-43 |
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* {{in lang|fr}} Sachs, Curt, ''Les instruments de musique de Madagascar'', Paris, Institut d’ethnologie, 1938. |
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* {{en}} Hagelberg ''et alii'', [http://anthro.unige.ch/~sanchez-mazas/phm/27HAGELBERG_CHAP16-OK--------COLOUR-PLATE-TO-ADD.pdf "A genetic perspective on the origins and dispersal of the austronesians. Mitochondrial DNA variation from Madagascar to Easter islands"] |
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* {{in lang|fr}} Simon, Pierre (2006), La langue des ancêtres. Une périodisation du malgache de l’origine au XVIe siècle, Paris, L’Harmattan. |
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* {{en}} Hurles, M. E. et al., [http://ychrom.invint.net/pubs/1/442/ "The Dual Origin of the Malagasy in Island Southeast Asia and East Africa: Evidence from Maternal and Paternal Lineages"]. ''American Journal of Human Genetics'', vol. 76, 894–901, 2005. (ISSN : 0002-9297) |
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* {{ |
* {{in lang|fr}} Vérin, Pierre, ''Madagascar'', Paris, Karthala, 2000. |
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* {{en}} Jones, Arthur M., [http://books.google.com/books?id=-isMAQAAIAAJ&dq=sachs%20curt%20instruments%20musique%20madagascar&hl=fr&source=gbs_similarbooks ''Africa and Indonesia. The Evidence Of The Xylophone And Other Musical And Cultural Factors''], Leiden, E.J.Brill, 1971. {{plume}} |
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* {{fr}} Ricaut ''et alii'' (2009) [http://www.biomedcentral.com/1471-2164/10/605 A new deep branch of eurasian mtDNA macrohaplogroup M reveals additional complexity regarding the settlement of Madagascar ], ''BMC Genomics'' |
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* {{fr}} Sachs, Curt, [http://books.google.com/books?id=keEZAAAAMAAJ&q=sachs+curt+instruments+musique+madagascar&dq=sachs+curt+instruments+musique+madagascar&hl=fr&ei=VGNQTvGhIoPysgbV8dXvDA&sa=X&oi=book_result&ct=result&resnum=1&ved=0CDQQ6AEwAA ''Les instruments de musique de Madagascar''], Paris, Institut d’ethnologie, 1938. {{plume}} |
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* {{en}} Schmidhoffer, August, [http://www.scu.edu.tw/music/2005ifet/3e.pdf «Some Remarks On The Austronesian Background of Malagasy Music »], 2005. {{plume}} |
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*{{fr}}Simon, Pierre (2006), [http://books.google.com/books?id=MFsBYffWD48C&printsec=frontcover&dq=Simon+Pierre+Fitenin-drazana&hl=fr&ei=P1dvTpXpBc_P4QSR5tCXCQ&sa=X&oi=book_result&ct=result&resnum=1&ved=0CC0Q6AEwAA#v=onepage&q&f=false La langue des ancêtres. Une périodisation du malgache de l’origine au XVIe siècle], Paris, L’Harmattan. |
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* {{fr}} Vérin, Pierre, ''[http://books.google.com/books?id=lzRyAAAAMAAJ&q=verin+madagascar&dq=verin+madagascar&hl=fr&ei=8IZTTsCzE4z3sgaetKGDDg&sa=X&oi=book_result&ct=result&resnum=1&ved=0CDsQ6AEwAA Madagascar]'', Paris, Karthala, 2000. {{plume}} |
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== |
===in Malagasy=== |
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* Ramilison, Emmanuel (Pastor) (1951), Andriantomara-Andriamamilazabe. Loharanon' ny Andriana nanjaka eto Imerina, Imprimerie Ankehitriny. (Malagasy) |
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*[http://www.state.gov/p/af/ci/ma/ Country Profile of Madagascar, U.S. Department of State] |
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* Rasamimanana, Joseph (Dr.) (1909) et Louis de Gonzague Razafindrazaka (Governor), Ny Andriantompokoindrindra, Antananarivo, 50 pages. (Malagasy) |
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*[https://www.cia.gov/library/publications/the-world-factbook/geos/ma.html Country Profile of Madagascar, CIA - The World Factbook] |
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* Ravelojaona (Pastor) (1937–1970), Firaketana ny Fiteny sy ny Zavatra Malagasy, Encyclopedic Dictionary, Antananarivo, 5 Volumes. (Malagasy) |
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*[http://www.iias.nl/iiasn/17/regions/17CCAC01.html Newsletter article on the first settlers of Madagascar] |
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*[http://www.wildmadagascar.org/history/ A Historical Timeline for Madagascar] |
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*[http://www.historyofnations.net/africa/madagascar.html History of Madagascar] |
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*[http://www.colonialvoyage.com/madag.html Madagascar: a Portuguese settlement: the Portuguese fort near Tolanaro] |
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*[http://www.royal-house-of-madagascar.blogspot.com/ Royal House of Madagascar] |
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== External links == |
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{{Wikivoyage|History of Madagascar}} |
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* [https://2009-2017.state.gov/p/af/ci/ma/ Country Profile of Madagascar, U.S. Department of State] |
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* [https://www.cia.gov/the-world-factbook/countries/madagascar/ Country Profile of Madagascar, CIA – The World Factbook] |
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* [https://web.archive.org/web/20060224063919/http://www.iias.nl/iiasn/17/regions/17CCAC01.html Newsletter article on the first settlers of Madagascar] |
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* [http://www.wildmadagascar.org/history/ A Historical Timeline for Madagascar] |
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* [https://web.archive.org/web/20050517071149/http://www.colonialvoyage.com/madag.html Madagascar: a Portuguese settlement: the Portuguese fort near Tolanaro] |
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* [http://www.royal-house-of-madagascar.blogspot.com/ Royal House of Madagascar] |
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{{Years in Madagascar}} |
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{{Madagascar topics}} |
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Latest revision as of 22:01, 27 December 2024
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The History of Madagascar started from the ancient supercontinent of Pangaea, containing amongst others the African continent and the Indian subcontinent, and by the island's late colonization by human settlers from the Sunda Islands (Malay Archipelago) and from East Africa.[1] These two factors facilitated the evolution and survival of thousands of endemic plant and animal species, some of which have gone extinct or are currently threatened with extinction. Trade in the Indian Ocean at the time of first colonization of Madagascar was dominated by Indonesian ships, probably of Borobudur ship and K'un-lun po types.[2][3]
Over two thousand years, the island has received waves of settlers of diverse origins, primarily Austronesian and Bantu.[4] Centuries of intermarriages between both groups created the Malagasy people, who are roughly an equal mixture of both groups. They speak the Malagasy, an Austronesian language with Bantu, French and Arabic influences.[5][6][7][8]
By the Middle Ages, over a dozen distinct ethnic identities had emerged on the island, typified by rule under a local chieftain. Some communities, such as the Sakalava, Merina and Betsimisaraka, were unified by leaders who established kingdoms, which gained wealth and power through commerce with Europeans and Arabs. Between the 16th and 18th centuries, pirate activity in the coastal areas of Madagascar was common. The Sakalava and Merina kingdoms in particular exploited European trade to strengthen the power of their kingdoms, trading Malagasy slaves for European firearms and other goods. Beginning in the early 19th century, the British and French competed for influence in Madagascar.
By the turn of the 19th century, King Andrianampoinimerina had reunited the highly populous Kingdom of Imerina in the central highlands, with its capital at Antananarivo. His son Radama I the Great expanded its authority to the island's other polities and was the first Malagasy sovereign to be recognized by foreign states as the ruler of the greater Merina Kingdom. During the rule of Queen Ranavalona I (r. 1828–1861), the kingdom was further expanded to encompass most of the island. Madagascar's population is estimated to have declined by half from 5 million to 2.5 million between 1833 and 1839 from war, disease, slavery and other and violence. She also attempted to eradicate European and Christian influence in the country.[9]
Christianity was made the state religion under Queen Ranavalona II (r. 1868–1883). In the 1880s, Britain recognised France's authority on the island. This led in 1890 to the Malagasy Protectorate, which was however rejected by the Kingdom of Madagascar, which led to the two Franco-Hova Wars which ended with France capturing the capital in September 1895. Conflict continued in the Menalamba rebellion against French rule that was defeated in 1897. The monarchy was dissolved, and the queen was exiled. Following conquest, the French abolished slavery in 1896, freeing approximately 500,000 slaves.[10]
During French rule, Malagasy people were required to fulfill corvée labor on French-run plantations while access to education or skilled positions were limited, although basic services like schools and clinics were extended across the island. Several militant nationalist secret societies emerged in opposition to French rule, of which the most prominent was Vy Vato Sakelika formed in 1913. Many Malagasy were conscripted to fight for France during the First (1914–1918) and Second World Wars (1939–1945), and during the latter Madagascar came under Vichy French control before being captured by the British in the Battle of Madagascar and returned to Free French control in 1942. In 1944, Madagascar became an overseas territory with representatives in the French National Assembly. Militant nationalists launched a large uprising in 1947 that was brutally suppressed by 1949.
The country gained full independence from France in 1960. Madagascar's First Republic (1960–1972) was established as a democratic system modeled on that of France and led by President Philibert Tsiranana. Popular unrest led to the socialist Democratic Republic of Madagascar under Admiral Didier Ratsiraka (1975–1992) distinguished by economic isolationism and political alliances with pro-Soviet states. By 1992, free and fair multiparty elections were held, ushering in the democratic Third Republic (1992–2009). Under the new constitution, the Malagasy public elected successive presidents Albert Zafy, Didier Ratsiraka, and Marc Ravalomanana. This latter was ousted in the 2009 Malagasy political crisis by a popular movement under the leadership of Andry Rajoelina. Elections were held on December 20, 2013, to elect a new president and return the country to constitutional governance.
First inhabitants and settlements (500 BCE–700 CE)
[edit]Archaeological evidence for date of first settlement
[edit]The earliest unambiguous evidence of continuous human presence in Madagascar was found at Andavakoera and dates to 490 CE,[11] and there is no archaeological evidence for human occupation in the highlands until around 1200. However, there is scattered evidence for much earlier human visits.
In 2009, archaeological excavations at Christmas River (south-central Madagascar) by Pat Wright and James Hansford located a purported elephant bird kill site, with bones showing human cut marks. These were dated to 8,500 BCE, but as yet there is no indication as to the identity of the hunters.[12][13] Archaeological finds such as cut marks on bones found in the northwest and stone tools in the northeast indicate that Madagascar was visited by foragers around 2000 BCE.[14][15]
There is potential evidence in the form of a cutmarked subfossil lemur bone from a palaeontological site, Taolambiby, in the southwest. One date was obtained, calibrated 530 to 300 BC (Godfrey & Jungers 2003). The cutmarking looks plausible, but there is a potential problem of old carbon from the limestone landscape compromising the date, and there are no associated artifacts or archaeological sites in the vicinity. Nearly contemporaneous potential evidence comes from cannabis or humulus pollen which occurs in a pollen column from the central highlands at an interpolated date of c. 2200 Before Present (BP).[16] There is a hypothesis that cannabis may have reached Africa 3000 years ago.
Necho II's Phoenician expedition c. 595 BCE circumnavigated Africa but did not see Madagascar when passing through the Mozambique Channel, as it stayed within sight of the African mainland. The island was likely uninhabited.[17]
Finally, a cutmarked pygmy hippo bone from Ambolisatra has been dated and calibrated to between 60 BC and 130 AD (2 SDs), but it is from a coastal swamp without indications of settlement in a heavily karstic region. Moreover, a similar bone from the same collection from a nearby site gave two widely divergent dates of 2020 and 3495 BC (MacPhee & Burney 1991). Transient visits to Madagascar that did not result in enduring settlement cannot be ruled out, and may have left some traces.[18]
A common Austronesian origin: The Vahoaka Ntaolo
[edit]Factual information about the peopling of Madagascar remains incomplete, but much recent multidisciplinary research and work in archaeology,[19] genetics,[20] linguistics,[21][22][23] and history[24][25][26][27] confirms that the Malagasy people were originally and overwhelmingly Austronesian peoples native to the Sunda Islands. They probably arrived on the west coast of Madagascar with outrigger canoes (waka) at the beginning of our era or as much as 300 years sooner according to archaeologists,[28] and perhaps even earlier under certain geneticists' assumptions.[29] On the basis of plant cultigens, Blench proposed the migrations occurred "at the earliest century BCE".[30]: 432 Archaeological work of Ardika and Bellwood suggests migration between 500 and 200 BCE.[31][32]
The Borobudur Ship Expedition in 2003–2004 affirmed scholars' ideas that ships from ancient Indonesia could have reached Madagascar and the west African coast for trade from the 8th century and after. A traditional Borobudur ship with outriggers was reconstructed and sailed in this expedition from Jakarta to Madagascar and Ghana.[33] As for the ancient route, one possibility is that Indonesian Austronesians came directly across the Indian Ocean from Java to Madagascar. It is likely that they went through the Maldives where evidence of old Indonesian boat design and fishing technology persists until the present.[34] The Malagasy language originated from the Southeast Barito language, and Ma'anyan language is its closest relative, with numerous Malay and Javanese loanwords.[35][36] It is known that Ma'anyan people were brought as laborers and slaves by Malay and Javanese people in their trading fleets, which reached Madagascar by ca. 50–500 AD.[37][38] These pioneers are known in the Malagasy oral tradition as the Ntaolo, from Proto-Malayo-Polynesian *tau-ulu, literally 'first men', from *tau, 'man', and *ulu, 'head; first; origin, beginning.[39] It is likely that those ancient people called themselves *va-waka, "the canoe people" from Proto-Malayo-Polynesian *va, 'people', and *waka 'canoe'. Today the term vahoaka means 'people' in Malagasy.
The Southeast Asian origin of the first Malagasy people explains certain features common among the Malagasy, for instance, the epicanthic fold common among all Malagasy whether coastal or highlands, whether pale, dark or copper skinned. This original population (vahoaka ntaolo) can be called the "Proto-Malagasy". They are the source of:
- the Malagasy language, common to the whole island, which shares many common roots with the Austronesian languages of Barito subgroup, which originated in South Kalimantan, such as Ma'anyan.[40]
- Malagasy cultural traditions shared with Austronesians of Taiwan, the Pacific Islands, Indonesia, New Zealand, and the Philippines including ancient customs, such as burying the dead within a canoe in the sea or in a lake, the cultivation of traditional Austronesian crops such as taro or saonjo, banana, coconut, and sugar cane, traditional architecture with a square house plan, music and musical instruments such as the antsiva conch, the hazolahy drum, the atranatrana xylophone, sodina flute, or the valiha tube zither,[41] and dance, including the "bird dance" found both in central and southern regions.[42]
As for the cause of the coming of these Austronesians, the history of the Indian Ocean from the early first millennium CE is still poorly understood. Madagascar may have played an important role in the trade of spices (especially cinnamon) and timber between Southeast Asia and the Middle East, directly or through the African coast and Madagascar.[citation needed]
Vazimba and Vezo
[edit]The first known concentrated population of human settlers emerged along the southeastern coast of the island, although the first landfall may have been made on the northern coast.[9] Upon arrival, early settlers practiced tavy (slash-and-burn agriculture) to clear the virgin coastal rainforests for the cultivation of their crops.[43] The first settlers encountered Madagascar's wealth of megafauna, including giant lemurs, elephant birds, giant fossa and the Malagasy hippopotamus, which have since become extinct due to hunting and habitat destruction.[44]
By 600, groups of these early settlers had moved inland and began clearing the forests of the central highlands (Imerina), where they particularly planted taro (saonjo) and probably rice (vary). These Vahoaka Ntaolo, hunters-gatherers and farmers, who decided to settle "in the forest", especially in the forests of the central highlands are known by the tradition[45] as the Vazimba (from *ba/va-yimba- 'those of the forest', from *yimba- 'forest' in Proto–Southeast Barito, today barimba or orang rimba in Malay[46]). Rafandrana, an ancestor of the Merina royal dynasty, for example, is known to have been a Vazimba. Rafohy and Rangita, the two founding queens of the Merina royalty, were also called Vazimbas.[45]
On the other side, the fishermen who, from the beginning, remained on the southwestern coast (probably the coasts of the first landing) were, according to the linguists, probably originally called the Vezo (from *ba/va/be/ve-jau – "those of the coast", borrowed from Proto-Malayo-Javanese, today veju in Bugis, bejau in Malay, and bajo in Javanese[23]), which today is still the name of a Southwestern tribe.
After the arrival of the newcomers (see below), as growing population density necessitated higher crop yields, irrigated rice paddies emerged in Betsileo country by 1600 and were complemented with terraced paddies throughout the central highlands a century later.[47] Zebu were introduced around 1000 by Bantu-speaking migrants from the African Great Lakes region (see below), who maintained large herds. The rising intensity of land cultivation and the ever-increasing demand for zebu pasturage in the central highlands had largely transformed the region from a forest ecosystem to barren grassland by the 17th century.[48]
Traders, explorers, and immigration (700–1500)
[edit]By the mid-first millennium (ca 700) until about 1500, the inner Vazimbas as much as the coastal Vezos clans welcomed new visitors or immigrants. These goods and/or slave traders came from the Middle East (Shirazi Persians, Omani Arabs, Arab Jews), Africa (Swahilis), and from Asia (Gujaratis, Malays, Javanese, Bugis). They were sometimes integrated within the coastal Vezos and the inner Vazimbas clans.[49]
Omani Arabs (from the 7th century)
[edit]The written history of Madagascar begins in the 7th century when Omanis established trading posts along the northwest coast and introduced Islam, the Arabic script (used to transcribe the Malagasy language in a form of writing known as the sorabe alphabet), Arab astrology and other cultural elements.[50] During this early period, Madagascar served as an important transoceanic trading port for the East African coast that gave Africa a trade route to the Silk Road and served simultaneously as a port for incoming ships. There is evidence that Bantu or Swahili sailors or traders may have begun sailing to the western shores of Madagascar as early as around the 6th and 7th century.[51]
According to the traditions of some Malagasy peoples, the first Bantus and Arabs to settle in Madagascar came as refugees from the civil wars that followed the death of Muhammad in 632.[52] Beginning in the 10th or 11th century, Arabic and Zanzibari slavers worked their way down the Swahili coast in their dhows and established settlements on the west coast of Madagascar. Notably they included the Zafiraminia, traditional ancestors of the Antemoro, Antanosy and other east coast ethnicities. The last wave of Arab immigrants, the Antalaotra, immigrated from Swahili colonies. They settled the northwest of the island (the Mahajanga area) and introduced, for the first time, Islam to Madagascar.[52]
Arab immigrants, though few in number compared to the native Austronesians and Bantus, nevertheless left a lasting impression. The Malagasy names for seasons, months, days, and coins in certain regions come from Arabic origins,[53][54] as do cultural features such as the practice of circumcision, the communal grain-pool, and different forms of salutation (such as salama).
Neo-Austronesians: Malays, Javanese, Bugis, and Orang Laut (from the 8th century)
[edit]According to oral tradition,[55] new Austronesian clans (Malays, Javanese, Bugis, and Orang Laut),[56] historically referred to in general, regardless of their native island, as the "Hova"[45] (from Old Bugis uwa, "commoner") landed in the north-west and east coast of the island. Adelaar's observations of Old Malay (Sanskritised), Old Javanese (Sanskritised) and Old Bugis borrowings in the initial Proto-Southeast-Barito language indicate that the first Hova waves came probably in the 7th century at the earliest.[57] Marre and Dahl pointed out that the number of Sanskrit words in Malagasy is very limited compared with the large number now found in Indonesian languages, which means that the Indonesian settlers must have come at an early stage of Hindu influence, that is ca. 400 AD.[58]
The Hova were probably derived from Indonesian thalassocracies. Their leaders were known as the diana in the Southeast and andriana or raondriana in the Center and the West[45][59][60] (from (ra)-hadi-an, "lord" or "master" in Old Javanese,[22] modern Javanese raden, also found in the Bugis noble title andi and the Tagalog word for "king" hari). They for the most part allied with Vazimba clans:[61][62]
- In the Northwest area of the current Ankoala (from kuala, "estuary" in Malay and Indonesian) where the Hova Orang Laut (Antalaotra in Malagasy) had probably established their base for their Indian Ocean operations.
- On the east coast (Betsimisaraka) where the Hova leaders were also called Filo (ha) be by the "neo-Vezo" clans.
- In the southeast where the leaders ("Diana") of the Zafiraminia and Zafikazimambo clans allied with the "neo-Vezo" and founded the later Antaisaka, Antaimoro and Antambahoaka kingdoms.
- In the west: the Maroserana dynasty which founded the Sakalava Kingdom is itself a result of Zafiraminia on the east coast.
- In the Center where repeated alliances among the Hova leaders (the andriana) (such as Andrianerinerina, Andriantomara and their descendants[60]) with the chiefs of Vazimba clans (such as Rafandrana and his descendants[63]) led to the Merina and Betsileo Kingdoms.
With the arrival of Islam, Persian and Arab traders soon supplanted the Indonesians on the coast of Africa and eventually extended their control over the Comoro Islands and parts of the coast of Madagascar. Meanwhile, with competition in the new joint naval powers of Song China and Chola South India, the thalassocracies of Indonesia were in rapid decline, though the Portuguese still encountered Javanese sailors in Madagascar in the sixteenth century.
Bantus (from the 9th century)
[edit]There is archaeological evidence that Bantu peoples, agro-pastoralists from East Africa, may have begun migrating to the island as early as the 6th and 7th century.[51] Other historical and archaeological records suggest that some of the Bantus were descendants of Swahili sailors and merchants who used dhows to traverse the seas to the western shores of Madagascar.[64] Finally some sources theorize that during the Middle Ages, Arab, Persian and Neo-Austronesian slave-traders[49] brought Bantu people to Madagascar transported by Swahili merchants to feed foreign demand for slaves.[65] Years of intermarriages created the Malagasy people, who primarily speak Malagasy, an Austronesian language with Bantu influences.[66] There are consequently many (Proto-)Swahili borrowings in the initial Proto-SEB Malagasy language.[67] This substratum is especially significantly present in the domestic and agricultural vocabulary (e.g. omby or aombe, "beef", from Swahili ng'ombe; tongolo "onion" from Swahili kitunguu; Malagasy nongo "pot" from nunggu in Swahili[22]).
Europeans (from 1500)
[edit]Europe knew of Madagascar through Arab sources; thus The Travels of Marco Polo claimed that "the inhabitants are Saracens, or followers of the law of Mohammed", without mentioning other inhabitants. Other than its size and location, everything about the island in the book describes southeastern Africa, not Madagascar. European contact began on 10 August 1500, when the Portuguese sea captain Diogo Dias sighted the island after his ship separated from a fleet going to India.[68][17] The Portuguese traded with the islanders and named the island São Lourenço (Saint Lawrence). In 1666, François Caron, the director general of the newly formed French East India Company, sailed to Madagascar.[69] The company failed to establish a colony on Madagascar but established ports on the nearby islands of Bourbon (now Réunion) and Isle de France (now Mauritius). In the late 17th century, the French established trading posts along the east coast. On Île Sainte-Marie, a small island off the northeastern coast of Madagascar, Captain Misson and his pirate crew allegedly founded the famous pirate utopia of Libertatia in the late 17th century. From about 1774 to 1824, Madagascar was a favourite haunt for pirates. Many European sailors were shipwrecked on the coasts of the island, among them Robert Drury, whose journal is one of the few written depictions of life in southern Madagascar during the 18th century.[70] Sailors sometimes called Madagascar "Island of the Moon".[71]
European settlements
[edit]By the 15th century, Europeans had wrested control of the spice trade from the Muslims. They did this by bypassing the Middle East and sending their cargo-ships around the Cape of Good Hope to India. The Portuguese mariner Diogo Dias became the first European to set foot on Madagascar when his ship, bound for India, blew off course in 1500. In the ensuing 200 years, the English and French tried (and failed) to establish settlements on the island.
Fever, dysentery, hostile Malagasy, and the trying arid climate of southern Madagascar soon terminated the English settlement near Toliara in 1646. Another English settlement in the north in Île Sainte-Marie came to an end in 1649. The French colony at Tôlanaro (Fort Dauphin) fared a little better: it lasted thirty years. On Christmas night 1672, local Antanosy tribesmen, perhaps angry because fourteen French soldiers in the fort had recently divorced their Malagasy wives to marry fourteen French orphan-women sent out to the colony, massacred the fourteen grooms and thirteen of the fourteen brides. The Antanosy then besieged the stockade at Tôlanaro for eighteen months. A ship of the French East India Company rescued the surviving thirty men and one widow in 1674.
In 1665, François Caron, the Director General of the newly formed French East India Company, sailed to Madagascar. The Company failed to found a colony on Madagascar but established ports on the nearby islands of Bourbon and Île-de-France (today's Réunion and Mauritius respectively). In the late 17th century, the French established trading-posts along the east coast.[53]
Pirates and slave-traders
[edit]Between 1680 and 1725, Madagascar became a pirate stronghold. Many unfortunate sailors became shipwrecked and stranded on the island. Those who survived settled down with the natives, or more often, found French or English colonies on the island or even pirate havens and thus became pirates themselves. One such case, that of Robert Drury,[72] resulted in a journal giving one of the few written depictions of southern Madagascar in the 18th century.
Notable pirates including William Kidd, Henry Every, John Bowen, and Thomas Tew made Antongil Bay and Île Sainte-Marie (a small island 12 miles off the northeast coast of Madagascar) their bases of operations. The pirates plundered merchant ships in the Indian Ocean, the Red Sea, and the Persian Gulf. They deprived Europe-bound ships of their silks, cloth, spices, and jewels. Vessels captured going in the opposite direction (to India) lost their coin, gold, and silver. The pirates robbed the Indian cargo ships that traded between ports in the Indian Ocean as well as ships commissioned by the East India Companies of France, England, and the Netherlands. The pilgrim fleet sailing between Surat in India and Mocha on the tip of the Arabian Peninsula were a favorite target, because the wealthy Muslim pilgrims often carried jewels and other finery with them to Mecca. Merchants in India, various ports of Africa, and Réunion showed willingness to fence the pirates' stolen goods. The low-paid seamen who manned merchant ships in the Indian Ocean hardly put up a fight, seeing as they had little reason or motivation to risk their lives. The pirates often recruited crewmen from the ships they plundered.
With regard to piracy in Malagasy waters, note the (semi-)legendary accounts of the alleged pirate-state of Libertalia.
Prior to the arrival of the Europeans, certain Malagasy tribes occasionally waged wars to capture and enslave prisoners. They either sold the slaves to Arab traders or kept them on-hand as laborers. Following the arrival of European slavers, human slaves became more valuable, and the coastal tribes of Madagascar took to warring with each other to obtain prisoners for the lucrative slave-trade. Instead of spears and cutlasses, the tribesmen fought with muskets, musket-balls, and gunpowder that they obtained from the Europeans, conducting fierce and brutal wars. On account of their relationship to the pirates, the Betsimisaraka in eastern Madagascar had more firearms than anyone else. They overpowered their neighbors, the Antankarana and Tsimihety, and even raided the Comoro Islands. As the tribe on the west coast with the most connections to the slave trade, the Sakalava people also had access to guns and powder.
Today, the people of Madagascar can be considered as the product of mixing between the first occupants, the vahoaka ntaolo Austronesians (Vazimba and Vezo) and those arrived later (Hova neo-Austronesians, Persians, Arabs, Africans and Europeans).
Genotypically, the original Austronesian heritage is more or less evenly distributed throughout the island. Researchers have noticed the "Polynesian motif" everywhere:[73] an old marker of Austronesian populations from before the great immigration to the islands of Polynesia and Melanesia. This fact would require a starting common home among the Proto-Malagasy vahoaka ntaolo (gone west to Madagascar) and the ancestors of the current Polynesians (left for the Pacific Islands in the East) between 500 BCE – 1 CE.
Feudal era (1500–1895)
[edit]Rise of the great kingdoms
[edit]Those new immigrants of the Middle Ages were a minority in numbers, yet their cultural contributions, political and technological to the neo-Vazimba and neo-Vezo world substantially altered their society and is the cause of the major upheavals of the sixteenth century that led to the Malagasy feudal era.
On the coasts, the integration of the East Asians, Middle Easterns, Bantus and Portuguese led to the establishment of the kingdoms of the Antakarana, Boina, Menabe and Vezo on the west coast, the Mahafaly and Antandroy in the south, and the Antesaka, Antambahoaka, Antemoro, Antanala and Betsimisaraka on the east coast.
In the interior, the struggle for hegemony between the different Neo-Vazimba clans of central highlands, called the Hova by the coastal Neo-Vezo clans, led to the creation of the Merina, Betsileo, Bezanozano, Sihanaka, Tsimihety and Bara kingdoms.
The birth of these kingdoms/tribes essentially altered the political structure of the ancient world of the Vahoaka Ntaolo, but for the most part the common language, customs, traditions, religion and economy was preserved.
Among the Central Kingdoms, the most important were the Betsileo kingdoms (Fandriana, Fisakana, Manandriana, Isandra) to the south, and the Merina kingdoms to the north. These were definitively unified in the early 19th century by Andrianampoinimerina. His son and successor Radama I (reigning 1810–1828) opened his country to foreign influence. With the support of the British, he extended its authority over much of the island. From 1817, the central Merina kingdoms, Betsileo, Bezanozano, and Sihanaka, unified by Radama I were known to the outside world as the Kingdom of Madagascar.
Sakalava
[edit]The island's West clan chiefs began to extend their power through trade with their Indian Ocean neighbors, first with Arab, Persian and Somali traders who connected Madagascar with East Africa, the Middle East and India, and later with European slave traders.[74] The wealth created in Madagascar through trade created a state system ruled by powerful regional monarchs known as the Maroserana. These monarchs adopted the cultural traditions of subjects in their territories and expanded their kingdoms. They took on divine status, and new nobility and artisan classes were created.[75] Madagascar functioned as a contact port for the other Swahili seaport city-states such as Sofala, Kilwa, Mombasa and Zanzibar. By the Middle Ages, large chiefdoms began to dominate considerable areas of the island. Among these were the Betsimisaraka alliance of the eastern coast and the Sakalava chiefdoms of the Menabe (centered in what is now the town of Morondava) and of Boina (centered in what is now the provincial capital of Mahajanga). The influence of the Sakalava extended across what are now the provinces of Antsiranana, Mahajanga and Toliara.
The island's chiefs began to extend their power through trade with their Indian Ocean neighbours, notably East Africa, the Middle East and India. Large chiefdoms began to dominate considerable areas of the island. Among these were the Sakalava chiefdoms of the Menabe, centred in what is now the town of Morondava, and of Boina, centered in what is now the provincial capital of Mahajanga (Majunga). The influence of the Sakalava extended across what are now the provinces of Antsiranana, Mahajanga and Toliara.
According to local tradition, the founders of the Sakalava kingdom were Maroseraña (or Maroseranana, "those who owned many ports") princes, from the Fiherenana (now Toliara). They quickly subdued the neighbouring princes, starting with the southern ones, in the Mahafaly area. The true founder of Sakalava dominance was Andriamisara; his son Andriandahifotsy (c. 1610–1658) then extended his authority northwards, past the Mangoky River. His two sons, Andriamanetiarivo and Andriamandisoarivo, extended gains further up to the Tsongay region (now Mahajanga). At about that time, the empire's unity starts to split, resulting in a southern kingdom (Menabe) and a northern kingdom (Boina). Further splits resulted, despite continued extension of the Boina princes' reach into the extreme north, in Antankarana country.
The Sakalava rulers of this period are known through the memoirs of Europeans such as Robert Drury, James Cook, Barnvelt (1719), Valentyn (1726).
Merina monarchy
[edit]King Andrianampoinimerina (1785–1810) and his son, Radama I (1810–1828) succeeded in uniting nearly all of Madagascar under Merina rule. These kings and their successors descended from a line of ancient Merina royalty who ruled the lands of Imerina in the central Highlands of Madagascar since at least the 16th century. Even prior to their eventual domination and unification of the entire island, the political and cultural activities of Merina royalty were to leave an indelible mark on contemporary Malagasy identity.
With the establishment of dominion over the greater part of the Highlands, Andrianampoinimerina became the first Merina monarch to be considered a king of Madagascar. The island continued to be ruled by a succession of Merina monarchs until the last of them, Ranavalona III, was deposed and exiled to Algeria by French forces who conquered and colonized the island in 1895.
King Andrianampoinimerina
[edit]Andrianampoinimerina, grandson of King Andriambelomasina and successor to his uncle King Andrianjafy, successfully reunited the fragmented Merina kingdom through a combination of diplomacy, strategic political marriages and successful military campaigns against rival princes. Andrianampoinimerina distinguished himself from other kings by codifying laws and supervising the building of dikes and trenches to increase the amount of arable land around his capital at Antananarivo in a successful bid to end the famines that had wracked Imerina for decades. The king ambitiously proclaimed: Ny ranomasina no valapariako (“the sea is the boundary of my rice-field”), and by the time of his death in 1810 he had conquered the Bara and Betsileo highland tribes, laying the groundwork for expansion of his kingdom to the shores of the island.
King Radama I (1810–1828)
[edit]Andrianampoinimerina's son Radama I (Radama the Great) assumed the throne during a turning-point in European history that had repercussions for Madagascar. With the defeat of Napoléon in 1814/1815, the balance of power in Europe and overseas shifted in Britain's favor. The British, eager to exert control over the trade routes of the Indian Ocean, had captured the islands of Réunion and Mauritius from the French in 1810. Although they returned Réunion to France, they kept Mauritius as a naval base which would maintain trade links throughout the British Empire. Mauritius's governor, in a bid to woo Madagascar from French control, recognized Radama I as King of Madagascar, a diplomatic maneuver meant to underscore the idea of the sovereignty of the island and thus to preclude claims by any European powers.
Radama I signed treaties with the United Kingdom outlawing the slave trade and admitting Protestant missionaries into Madagascar. As a result of these treaties Protestant missionaries from Britain would spread British influence in Madagascar; while outlawing the slave trade would weaken Réunion's economy by depriving the island of slave laborers for France's sugar plantations. In return for outlawing the slave trade, Madagascar received what the treaty called "The Equivalent": an annual sum of a thousand dollars in gold, another thousand in silver, stated amounts of gunpowder, flints, and muskets, plus 400 surplus British Army uniforms. The governor of Mauritius also sent military advisers who accompanied and sometimes led Merina soldiers in their battles against the Sakalava and Betsimisaraka. In 1824, having defeated the Betsimisaraka, Radama I declared, "Today, the whole island is mine! Madagascar has but one master." The king died in 1828 while leading his army on a punitive expedition against the Betsimisaraka.
Queen Ranavalona I (1828–1861)
[edit]The 33-year reign of Queen Ranavalona I, the widow of Radama I, was characterized by an increase in the size of the Kingdom of Madagascar as it conquered neighboring states as well as an effort to maintain the cultural and political sovereignty of Madagascar in the face of increasing foreign influence. The queen repudiated the treaties that Radama I had signed with Britain and, in 1835 after issuing a royal edict prohibiting the practice of Christianity in Madagascar, she expelled British missionaries from the island and began persecuting Christian converts who would not renounce their religion. Malagasy Christians would remember this period as ny tany maizina, or "the time when the land was dark".
During her reign, constant warfare, disease, slave labor, and harsh measures of justice resulted in a high mortality rate among the Malagasy population; the population of the island is estimated to have declined by half from 5 million to 2.5 million between 1833 and 1839.[77]
Unbeknownst to the queen, her son and heir, the crown-prince (the future Radama II), attended Roman Catholic masses in secret.[citation needed] The young man grew up under the influence of French nationals in Antananarivo. In 1854, he wrote a letter to Napoléon III inviting France to invade and uplift Madagascar.[citation needed] On 28 June 1855 he signed the Lambert Charter. This document gave Joseph-François Lambert, an enterprising French businessman who had arrived in Madagascar only three weeks before, the exclusive right to develop all minerals, forests, and unoccupied land in Madagascar in exchange for a 10-percent royalty payable to the Merina monarchy. In years to come, the French would show the Lambert Charter and the prince's letter to Napoléon III to explain the Franco-Hova Wars and the annexation of Madagascar as a colony. In 1857, the queen uncovered a plot by her son (the future Radama II) and French nationals in the capital to remove her from power. She immediately expelled all foreigners from Madagascar, sparing her son. Ranavalona died in 1861.
King Radama II (1861–1863)
[edit]In his brief two years on the throne, King Radama II re-opened trade with Mauritius and Réunion, invited Christian missionaries[68] and foreigners to return to Madagascar, and re-instated most of Radama I's reforms. His liberal policies angered the aristocracy, however, and Rainivoninahitriniony, the prime minister, engineered a coup d'état in which Radama II was strangled to death.
Queen Rasoherina (1863–1868)
[edit]A council of princes headed by Rainilaiarivony approached Rabodo, the widow of Radama II, the day after the death of her husband. They gave her the conditions under which she could succeed to the throne. These conditions included the suppression of trial by ordeal as well as the monarchy's defense of freedom of religion. Rabodo, crowned queen on 13 May 1863 under the throne name of Rasoherina, reigned until her death on 1 April 1868.[78]
The Malagasy people remember Queen Rasoherina for sending ambassadors to London and Paris and for prohibiting Sunday markets. On 30 June 1865, she signed a treaty with the United Kingdom giving British citizens the right to rent land and property on the island and to have a resident ambassador. With the United States of America she signed a trade agreement that also limited the importation of weapons and the export of cattle. Finally, with France the queen signed a peace between her descendants and the descendants of the Emperor of France.[79] Rasoherina married her prime minister, Rainivoninahitriniony, but public outcry against his involvement in the murder of Radama II soon forced his resignation and exile to Betsileo country south of Imerina. She then married his brother, Rainilaiarivony, head of the army at the time of Radama II's murder who was promoted to the post of Prime Minister upon the resignation and exile of his older brother. Rainilaiarivony would rule Madagascar from behind the scenes for the remaining 32 years of the Merina monarchy, marrying each of the final three queens of Madagascar in succession.
Queen Ranavalona II (1868–1883)
[edit]In 1869, Queen Ranavalona II, previously educated by the London Missionary Society, underwent baptism into the Church of England and subsequently made the Anglican faith the official state religion of Madagascar.[80] The queen had all the sampy (traditional royal idols) burned in a public display. Catholic and Protestant missionaries arrived in numbers to build churches and schools. The reign of Queen Ranavalona II proved the high water mark of British influence in Madagascar. British goods and weapons arrived on the island by way of South Africa.
Queen Ranavalona III (1883–1897)
[edit]Her public coronation as queen took place on 22 November 1883 and she took the name Ranavalona III. As her first order of business she confirmed the nomination of Rainilaiarivony and his entourage in their positions. She also promised to do away with the French threat.[81]
End of the monarchy
[edit]Angry at the cancellation of the Lambert Charter and seeking to restore property seized from French citizens, France invaded Madagascar in 1883 in what became known as the first Franco-Hova War (Hova as a name referring to the Merina aristocrats). At the war's end, Madagascar ceded Antsiranana (Diégo Suarez) on the northern coast to France and paid 560,000 gold francs to the heirs of Joseph-François Lambert. In Europe, meanwhile, European diplomats had worked out an agreement whereby Britain, in order to establish control over the Sultanate of Zanzibar, ceded its rights over the island of Heligoland to Germany and renounced all claims of influence in Madagascar in favor of France. The agreement spelled the end of the Madagascan political independence. Rainilaiarivony had succeeded in playing the various European powers against one another, but now France could act without fear of British support towards the Madagascans.[citation needed]
In 1895, a French flying column landed in Mahajanga (Majunga) and marched by way of the Betsiboka River to the capital, Antananarivo, taking the city's defenders by surprise (they had expected an attack from the much closer east coast). Twenty French soldiers died fighting and 6,000 died of malaria and other diseases before the second Franco-Hova War ended. In 1896 the French Parliament voted to annex Madagascar. The 103-year-old Merina monarchy ended with the royal family sent into exile in Algeria.
International recognition and modernization of the Kingdom (1817–1895)
[edit]The kingdom of Madagascar continued its transformation throughout the 19th century from a locally grown monarchy into a modern state.
Before Radama I the Malagasy language was written in a script known as sorabe. In 1820 under the direction of David Jones, a Welsh missionary of the London Missionary Society, Radama I codified the new Malagasy Latin alphabet of 21 letters which replaced the old sorabe alphabet.[82] By 1830 the Bible was the first book written in this new Malagasy Latin alphabet. It is the oldest complete translation of the bible into a sub-Saharan African language.
The United States and the Kingdom of Madagascar concluded a commercial convention in 1867 after which Queen Rasoherina and Prime Minister Rainilaiarivoy exchanged gifts with president Andrew Johnson.[83] A treaty of peace, friendship, and commerce was then signed in 1881.[84]
During the reign of Ranavalona I, early attempts at industrialization took place from 1835 under the direction of the French Jean Laborde (a survivor of a shipwreck off the east coast), producing soap, porcelain, metal tools and firearms (rifles, cannons, etc.)..
In 1864 Antananarivo opened the first hospital and a modern medical school. Two years later appeared the first newspaper. A scientific journal in English (Antananarivo Annual) was released from 1875. In 1894, on the eve of the establishment of colonial rule, the schools of the kingdom, mainly led by the Protestant missions, were attended by over 200,000 students.
French colonization
[edit]In 1750, the ruler of the Kingdom of Betsimisaraka, Bety of Betsimisaraka, ceded the island Nosy Boraha (Île Sainte-Marie) to the Kingdom of France. However, in 1752 the French Colonists were massacred when the local population rebelled. France left the settlement abandoned for roughly half a century until returning in 1818.[85]
In 1840 Tsiomeko, the ruler of Nosy Be island, accepted French protection in 1840. The French took possession of the island in 1841, and in 1849 an unsuccessful attempt was made to expel them.[86]
In the Berlin Treaty, the British accepted the claims of France to exert its influence on Madagascar, and after the first Franco-Hova Wara treaty of alliance between France and Madagascar was signed on 17 December 1885 by Queen Ranavalona III, granting France a protectorate over the Diego-Suarez bay and surrounding territory, as well as the islands of Nosy-Be and Île Sainte-Marie.
Disagreements on the implementation of this treaty served as a pretext for the French invasion of 1895, which first met little resistance. The authority of the prime minister Rainilaiarivony, in power since 1864, had become very unpopular with the public.
The British accepted the imposition of a French protectorate over Madagascar in 1890 in return for recognition of British sovereignty over Zanzibar (subsequently part of Tanzania) and as part of an overall definition of spheres of influence in the area.[87] The intention of the French was initially to maintain the protectorate in order to control the economy and foreign relations of the island. But later, the outbreak of the Menalamba rebellion and the arrival of General Gallieni (responsible for "pacifying" the country) in 1896 led to the colonization of the island and the exile of the queen to Algeria.
In 1904–1905 Madagascar was the scene of a large-scale uprising by various tribes and tribal leaders, among whom Kotavy, a former French corporal who defected to the rebels, filled a preponderant role.[8]
Malagasy troops fought in France, Morocco, and Syria during World War II. Prior to the implementation of the Final Solution, Nazi Germany had considered the Madagascar Plan, which would have relocated European Jews to Madagascar. After France fell to the Germans in 1940, the Vichy government administered Madagascar until 1942, when British and Commonwealth troops occupied the strategic island in the Battle of Madagascar. The United Kingdom handed over control of the island to Free French Forces in 1943.
Revolt and decolonization (1947–1960)
[edit]In 1948, with French prestige at a low ebb, the French government, headed by Prime Minister Paul Ramadier of the French Section of the Workers' International (SFIO) party, suppressed the Madagascar revolt, a nationalist uprising.[88][89][90][91][92][93]
The French subsequently established reformed institutions in 1956 under the Loi Cadre (Overseas Reform Act), and Madagascar moved peacefully toward independence. The Malagasy Republic, proclaimed on 14 October 1958, became an autonomous state within the French Community. On 26 March 1960 France agreed to Madagascar becoming fully independent.[94] On 26 June 1960 Madagascar became an independent country and Philibert Tsiranana became its first president.
Independence
[edit]First Republic (1960–1972)
[edit]Tsiranana's rule represented continuation, with French settlers (or colons) still in positions of power. Unlike many of France's former colonies, the Malagasy Republic strongly resisted movements towards communism.[95]
In 1972, protests against these policies came to a head and Tsiranana had to step down. He handed power to General Gabriel Ramanantsoa of the army and his provisional government. This régime reversed previous policy in favour of closer ties with the Soviet Union.[96]
On 5 February 1975, Colonel Richard Ratsimandrava became the President of Madagascar. After six days as head of the country, he died in an assassination while driving from the presidential palace to his home. Political power passed to Gilles Andriamahazo.
Second Republic (1972–1991)
[edit]On 15 June 1975, Lieutenant-Commander Didier Ratsiraka (who had previously served as foreign minister) came to power in a coup. Elected president for a seven-year term, Ratsiraka moved further towards socialism, nationalising much of the economy and cutting all ties with France.[96] These policies hastened the decline in the Madagascan economy that had begun after independence as French immigrants left the country, leaving a shortage of skills and technology behind. Ratsiraka's original seven-year term as president continued after his party (Avant-garde de la Révolution Malgache or AREMA) became the only legal party in the 1977 elections.[95]
In the 1980s, Madagascar moved back towards France, abandoning many of its communist-inspired policies in favour of a market economy, though Ratsiraka still kept hold of power.[53]
Eventually, opposition, both within and without, forced Ratsiraka to consider his position and in 1992 the country adopted a new and democratic constitution.[96]
Third Republic (1991–2002)
[edit]The first multi-party elections came in 1993, with Albert Zafy defeating Ratsiraka.[95] Despite being a strong proponent of a liberal, free-market economy, Zafy ran on a ticket critical of the International Monetary Fund (IMF) and the World Bank. During his presidency the country struggled to implement IMF and World Bank guidelines that were, on the short term, suicidal politically.[97]
As president Zafy was frustrated by the restraints placed upon the powers of his office by the new constitution. His quest for increased executive power put him on a collision course with the parliament led by then prime minister Francisque Ravony.[98] Zafy eventually won the power he sought after but suffered impeachment at the hands of the disenfranchised parliament in 1996 for violating the constitution by refusing to promulgate specific laws.[99]
The ensuing elections saw a turnout of less than 50% and unexpectedly resulted in the re-election of Didier Ratsiraka.[96] He moved further towards capitalism. The influence of the IMF and the World Bank led to widespread privatisation.
Opposition to Ratsiraka began to grow again. Opposition parties boycotted provincial elections in 2000, and the 2001 presidential election produced more controversy. The opposition candidate Marc Ravalomanana claimed victory after the first round (in December) but the incumbent rejected this position. In early 2002 supporters of the two sides took to the streets and violent clashes took place. Ravalomanana claimed that fraud had occurred in the polls. After an April recount the High Constitutional Court declared Ravalomanana president. Ratsiraka continued to dispute the result but his opponent gained international recognition, and Ratsiraka had to go into exile in France, though forces loyal to him continued activities in Madagascar.[95]
Post-Ratsiraka
[edit]Ravalomanana's Tiako I Madagasikara party achieved overwhelming electoral success in December 2001 and he survived an attempted coup in January 2003. He used his mandate to work closely with the IMF and the World Bank to reform the economy, to end corruption and to realise the country's potential.[95] Ratsiraka went on trial (in absentia) for embezzlement (the authorities charged him with taking $8m of public money with him into exile) and the court sentenced him to ten years' hard labour.[100]
Ravalomanana is credited with improving the country's infrastructure, such as roads, along with making improvements in education and health, but has faced criticism for his lack of progress against poverty; purchasing power is said to have declined during his time in office.[101][102] On 18 November 2006, his plane was forced to divert from Madagascar's capital during a return trip from Europe following reports of a coup underway in Antananarivo and shooting near the airport;[103] however, this alleged coup attempt was unsuccessful.
Ravalomanana ran for a second term in the presidential election held on December 3, 2006.[104] According to official results, he won the election with 54.79% of the vote in the first round; his best results were in Antananarivo Province, where he received the support of 75.39% of voters.[105] He was sworn in for his second term on January 19, 2007.[106]
Ravalomanana dissolved the National Assembly in July 2007, prior to the end of its term, following a constitutional referendum earlier in the year. Ravalomanana said that a new election needed to be held so that the National Assembly would reflect the changes made in this referendum.[107]
He became involved in a political standoff after he closed the TV station belonging to Antananarivo mayor Andry Rajoelina. In January 2009, protests which then turned violent were organized and spearheaded by Andry Rajoelina, the mayor of the capital city of Antananarivo and a prominent opponent of President Ravalomanana.[108][109]
The situation fundamentally changed on 10 March 2009 when army leaders forced the recently appointed defense secretary to resign (the previous one had decided to resign after the killings by the presidential guard on 7 February 2009). They also announced that they gave the opponents 72 hours to dialogue and find a solution to the crisis before they would take further action. This move came after the leaders of the main military camp had announced a day earlier that they would not execute orders coming from the presidency any more since their duty was to protect the people, and not to oppress them, as groups of the military had done over the last few days.[110][111]
On 16 March 2009, the army seized the presidential palace in the centre of Antananarivo. Ravalomanana was not in the palace at the time.[112] He handed his resignation to the army, which then decided to hand over power to his fierce political rival, Andry Rajoelina. The second round of the postponed presidential elections was held in December 2013 and the results were announced in January 2014. The winner and the next president was Hery Rajaonarimampianina. He was backed by Rajoelina who led the 2009 coup and still was very influential political figure.[113][114]
In 2018 the first round of the presidential election was held on 7 November and the second round was held on 10 December. Three former presidents and the most recent president were the main candidates of the elections. Former president Andry Rajoelina won the second round of the elections. He was previously president from 2009 to 2014. Former president Marc Ravalomanana lost the second round and he did not accept the results because of allegations of fraud. Ravalomanana was president from 2002 to 2009. The most recent president Hery Rajaonarimampianina received very modest support in the first round. In January 2019 the High Constitutional Court declared Rajoelina as the winner of the elections and the new president.[115][116][117]
In 2019, an epidemic of measles killed 1,200 people.[118]
In 2021, Madagascar's worst drought in 40 years left more than a million people in southern Madagascar food insecure. This forced thousands of people to leave their homes to search for food.[119][120]
In November 2023, Andry Rajoelina was re-elected to another term with 58.95% of the vote in the first round of the election. Turnout was 46.36%, the lowest in a presidential election in the country's history.[121]
See also
[edit]- Ethnic groups of Madagascar
- History of Africa
- History of Southern Africa
- List of Imerina monarchs
- List of presidents of Madagascar
- Politics of Madagascar
- Antananarivo history and timeline
Footnotes
[edit]- ^ Heiske, Margit; Alva, Omar; Pereda-Loth, Veronica; Van Schalkwyk, Matthew; Radimilahy, Chantal; Letellier, Thierry; Rakotarisoa, Jean-Aimé; Pierron, Denis (2021). "Genetic evidence and historical theories of the Asian and African origins of the present Malagasy population". Human Molecular Genetics. 30 (R1): R72 – R78. doi:10.1093/hmg/ddab018. PMID 33481023.
- ^ Beale, Philip (2006). "From Indonesia to Africa: Borobudur Ship Expedition". ZIFF Journal. 3: 17–24.
- ^ Manguin, Pierre-Yves (September 1980). "The Southeast Asian Ship: An Historical Approach". Journal of Southeast Asian Studies. 11 (2): 266–276. doi:10.1017/S002246340000446X. JSTOR 20070359. S2CID 162220129.
- ^ Pierron, Denis; Heiske, Margit; Razafindrazaka, Harilanto; Rakoto, Ignace; Rabetokotany, Nelly; Ravololomanga, Bodo; Rakotozafy, Lucien M.-A.; Rakotomalala, Mireille Mialy; Razafiarivony, Michel; Rasoarifetra, Bako; Raharijesy, Miakabola Andriamampianina (August 8, 2017). "Genomic landscape of human diversity across Madagascar". Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. 114 (32): E6498 – E6506. Bibcode:2017PNAS..114E6498P. doi:10.1073/pnas.1704906114. ISSN 0027-8424. PMC 5559028. PMID 28716916.
- ^ Pierron, Denis; Razafindrazaka, Harilanto; Pagani, Luca; Ricaut, François-Xavier; Antao, Tiago; Capredon, Mélanie; Sambo, Clément; Radimilahy, Chantal; Rakotoarisoa, Jean-Aimé; Blench, Roger M.; Letellier, Thierry (January 21, 2014). "Genome-wide evidence of Austronesian–Bantu admixture and cultural reversion in a hunter-gatherer group of Madagascar". Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. 111 (3): 936–941. Bibcode:2014PNAS..111..936P. doi:10.1073/pnas.1321860111. ISSN 0027-8424. PMC 3903192. PMID 24395773.
- ^ Sanger Institute (May 4, 2005). "The cryptic past of Madagascar: Human inhabitants of Madagascar are genetically unique". Archived from the original on March 3, 2011. Retrieved April 30, 2006.
- ^ Cox, Murray P.; Nelson, Michael G.; Tumonggor, Meryanne K.; Ricaut, François-X.; Sudoyo, Herawati (2012). "A small cohort of Island Southeast Asian women founded Madagascar". Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences. 279 (1739): 2761–2768. doi:10.1098/rspb.2012.0012. PMC 3367776. PMID 22438500.
- ^ a b Mutibwa, Phares M. (1980). "Resistance to Colonialism: The Revolt of 1904—5 in South-East Madagascar". Transafrican Journal of History. 9 (1/2): 134–152. ISSN 0251-0391. JSTOR 24328554.
- ^ a b Campbell, Gwyn (1993). "The Structure of Trade in Madagascar, 1750–1810". The International Journal of African Historical Studies. 26 (1): 111–148. doi:10.2307/219188. JSTOR 219188.
- ^ Shillington (2005), p. 878
- ^ 'The archaeological evidence for the earliest human presence in Madagascar comes from Andavakoera near Diego Suarez and is dated to AD420 (AD250-590, 2SDs) (Dewar & Wright 1996).
- ^ "Ancient bird bones redate human activity in Madagascar by 6,000 years". Zoological Society of London (ZSL). September 10, 2018.
- ^ "Ancient bird bones redate human activity in Madagascar by 6,000 years". Phys.org. September 12, 2018.
- ^ Gommery, D.; Ramanivosoa, B.; Faure, M.; Guérin, C.; Kerloc'h, P.; Sénégas, F.; Randrianantenaina, H. (2011). "Oldest evidence of human activities in Madagascar on subfossil hippopotamus bones from Anjohibe (Mahajanga Province)". Comptes Rendus Palevol. 10 (4): 271–278. doi:10.1016/j.crpv.2011.01.006.
- ^ Dewar, R. E.; Radimilahy, C.; Wright, H. T.; Jacobs, Z.; Kelly, G. O.; Berna, F. (2013). "Stone tools and foraging in northern Madagascar challenge Holocene extinction models". Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America. 110 (31): 12583–12588. Bibcode:2013PNAS..11012583D. doi:10.1073/pnas.1306100110. PMC 3732966. PMID 23858456.
- ^ Burney 1987
- ^ a b Ley, Willy (August 1966). "Scherazade's Island". For Your Information. Galaxy Science Fiction. pp. 45–55.
- ^ Peter Forster, Shuichi Matsumutra, Matthieu Vizuete-Forster, Petya Belinda Blumbach & Robert Dewar (2008) "The Genetic Prehistory of Madagascar's Female Asian Lineages", In: Matsumura, Shūichi; Forster, Peter; Renfrew, Colin (2008). Simulations, Genetics and Human Prehistory. McDonald Institute for Archaeological Research. ISBN 978-1-902937-45-8., pp71-72
- ^ Burney et alii (2004)
- ^ Hurles et alii (2005)
- ^ Dahl O. (1991)
- ^ a b c Adelaar, K.A. (2006)
- ^ a b Simon, Pierre R. (2006). Fitenin-drazana. L'Harmattan. ISBN 978-2-296-01108-3.
- ^ Staff (May 4, 2005) "The cryptic past of Madagascar" Wellcome Trust Sanger Institute, citing Hurles, Matthew E.; Sykes, Bryan C.; Jobling, Mark A.; Forster, Peter (May 2005). "The Dual Origin of the Malagasy in Island Southeast Asia and East Africa: Evidence from Maternal and Paternal Lineages". The American Journal of Human Genetics. 76 (5): 894–901. doi:10.1086/430051. PMC 1199379. PMID 15793703.
- ^ Verin (2000), p.20
- ^ Diamond, Jared M. (1999). Guns, germs, and steel: the fates of human societies. New York: W. W. Norton & Company. p. 50. ISBN 978-0-393-31755-8. Retrieved March 21, 2011.
- ^ Dahl, Otto Chr (1991). Migration from Kalimantan to Madagascar. Oslo, Norway: Institute for Comparative Research in Human Culture, Norwegian University Press. ISBN 82-00-21140-1.
- ^ Burney et al, op. cit.
- ^ Ricaut et al, op. cit.
- ^ Blench, Roger. “The Ethnographic Evidence for Long-distance Contacts Between Oceania and East Africa” In The Indian Ocean in Antiquity, edited by Julian Reade, pp. 417–38. London: Kegan Paul/British Museum 1996 pp. 417–38.
- ^ I. W. Ardika & P. Bellwood, “Sembiran: The Beginnings of Indian Contact with Bali”, Antiquity 65 (1991): 221–32.
- ^ I. W. Ardika, P. Bellwood, I. M. Sutaba & K. C. Yuliati, “Sembiran and the First Indian Contacts with Bali: An Update”, Antiquity 71(1997): 193–95.
- ^ Pareanom, Yusi Avianto (2005). Cinnamon Route: The Samudraraksa Borobudur Expedition. Taman Wisata Candi Borobudur, Prambanan & Ratu Boko. ISBN 978-979-8083-58-7.
- ^ P. Y. Manguin. Pre-modern Southeast Asian Shipping in the Indian Ocean: The Maldive Connection. ‘New Directions in Maritime History Conference’ Fremantle. December 1993.
- ^ Otto Chr. Dahl, Malgache et Maanjan: une comparaison linguistique, Egede-Instituttet Avhandlinger, no. 3 (Oslo: Egede-Instituttet, 1951), p. 13.
- ^ There are also some Sulawesi loanwords, which Adelaar attributes to contact prior to the migration to Madagascar: See K. Alexander Adelaar, “The Indonesian Migrations to Madagascar: Making Sense of the Multidisciplinary Evidence”, in Truman Simanjuntak, Ingrid Harriet Eileen Pojoh and Muhammad Hisyam (eds.), Austronesian Diaspora and the Ethnogeneses of People in Indonesian Archipelago, (Jakarta: Indonesian Institute of Sciences, 2006), pp. 8–9.
- ^ Dewar, Robert E.; Wright, Henry T. (1993). "The culture history of Madagascar". Journal of World Prehistory. 7 (4): 417–466. doi:10.1007/bf00997802. hdl:2027.42/45256. S2CID 21753825.
- ^ Burney DA, Burney LP, Godfrey LR, Jungers WL, Goodman SM, Wright HT, Jull AJ (August 2004). "A chronology for late prehistoric Madagascar". Journal of Human Evolution. 47 (1–2): 25–63. doi:10.1016/j.jhevol.2004.05.005. PMID 15288523.
- ^ Randriamasimanana, "The Malayo-Polynesian Origin of Malagasy"
- ^ O. Dahl, op. cit., Adelaar, op. cit., Simon, op. cit.
- ^ schmidhoffer, A. (2005)
- ^ This is according to historian Edward Ralaimihoatra, who calls these Austronesians globally the Vazimba, without distinguishing between the coastal Vezo, and the Vazimba of the forest. "[T]he main basis of the Malagasy language and techniques of Austronesian origins such as outrigger canoes, flooded rice fields, squared timber boxes or branches built on stilts, villages in the hills surrounded by ditches, etc. This fund has received contributions resulting from human exchanges between Africa and Madagascar, with navigation between the Arab coast of Saudi, East Africa, and the Big Island." Ralaimihoatra E., "The Primitives or Vazimba Malagasy", in History of Madagascar)
- ^ Kent, Raymond (1970). Early Kingdoms in Madagascar: 1500–1700. New York: Holt, Rinehart and Winston. ISBN 9780030841712.
- ^ Virah-Sawmy, M.; Willis, K.J.; Gillson, L. (2010). "Evidence for drought and forest declines during the recent megafaunal extinctions in Madagascar". Journal of Biogeography. 37 (3): 506–519. Bibcode:2010JBiog..37..506V. doi:10.1111/j.1365-2699.2009.02203.x. S2CID 84382916.
- ^ a b c d Callet, François (1972) [1908]. Tantara ny andriana eto Madagasikara (histoire des rois). Antananarivo: Imprimerie catholique.
- ^ Simon, Pierre (2006), La langue des ancêtres. Une périodisation du malgache de l’origine au XVIe siècle, Paris, L’Harmattan., p. 245
- ^ Campbell (1993), p.116
- ^ Gade, Daniel W. (1996). "Deforestation and its effects in Highland Madagascar". Mountain Research and Development. 16 (2): 101–116. doi:10.2307/3674005. JSTOR 3674005.
- ^ a b Larson, Pier M. (2000). History and Memory in the Age of Enslavement. Becoming Merina in Highland Madagascar, 1770–1822. Social History of Africa Series. Portsmouth, New Hampshire: Heinemann, 414 p. ISBN 978-0-325-00217-0.
- ^ Metz, Helen Chapin (1994). "Library of Congress Country Studies: Madagascar (Education)". Archived from the original on March 27, 2019. Retrieved February 1, 2011.
- ^ a b Majewski, Teresita; Gaimster, David (2009). International Handbook of Historical Archaeology. Springer Science & Business Media. ISBN 978-0-387-72071-5.
- ^ a b Sigmund Edland, Tantaran’ny Fiangonana Loterana Malagasy
- ^ a b c "HISTORY OF MADAGASCAR". www.historyworld.net. Retrieved May 27, 2020.
- ^ Dahle, L. (1876). "THE INFLUENCE OF THE ARABS ON THE MALAGASY LANGUAGE". The Antananarvio Annual and Madagascar Magazine. 1: 75–91 – via Google Books.
- ^ Ramilison E.,Andriantomara-Andriamamilazabe: loharanon'ny andriana nanjaka teto Imerina, Antananarivo, Lutheran Printing
- ^ Adelaar, KA (2006) "The Indonesian migrations to Madagascar: Making sense of the multidisciplinary evidence")
- ^ Adelaar, “The Indonesian Migrations to Madagascar”, p. 15.
- ^ Dahl, Otto Chr. Malgache et Maanjan: une Comparaison Linguistique, Egede-Instituttet Avhandlinger, no. 3. Oslo: Egede-Instituttet, 1951.
- ^ Ramilison, 1951
- ^ a b Ramilison, Emmanuel (1951). Ny loharanon'ny andriana nanjaka teto Imerina : Andriantomara-Andriamamilazabe. Imprimerie Ankehitriny.
- ^ Ravelojaona et alii 1937
- ^ Ravelojaona, Randzavola, Rajaonah G. (1937). Firaketana ny Fiteny sy ny Zavatra Malagasy. Antananarivo: Imprimerie Tanananarivienne.
{{cite book}}
: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link) - ^ Callet, F., op. cit.
- ^ History of Madagascar An economic history of Imperial Madagascar, 1750–1895. By Gwyn Campbell. pg. 49 (2005). Retrieved February 15, 2012
- ^ Cambridge World History of Slavery The Cambridge World History of Slavery: The ancient Mediterranean world. By Keith Bradley, Paul Cartledge. pg. 76 (2011). Retrieved February 15, 2012
- ^ On the Origins and Admixture of Malagasy: New Evidence from High-Resolution Analyses of Paternal and Maternal Lineages
- ^ Dahl, O. (1991), op. cit.
- ^ a b Herbermann, Charles, ed. (1913). Catholic Encyclopedia. New York: Robert Appleton Company. .
- ^ Vincent, Rose (1990). The French in India: From Diamond Traders to Sanskrit Scholars. Popular Prakashan. ISBN 978-0-86132-259-6.
- ^ From MADAGASCAR to the MALAGASY REPUBLIC, by Raymond K. Kent pg 65–71
- ^ Madagascar: An Historical and Descriptive Account of the Island and Its Former Dependencies by Samuel Pasfield Oliver, p. 6. (excerpted in Google Book Search)
- ^ From Madagascar to the Malagasy Republic by Raymond K. Kent, Westport, Conn.: Greenwood Press, 1976 (ISBN 0-8371-8421-5), pages 55–71.
- ^ Hurles et alii (2005), Ricaut et alii (2009), Hagelberg et alii (2008)
- ^ Cities of the Middle East and North Africa By Michael Dumper, Bruce E. Stanley, Janet L. Abu-Lug
- ^ "Kingdoms of Madagascar: Maroserana and Merina". Metmuseum.org. Retrieved April 25, 2010.
- ^ London Missionary Society, ed. (1869). Fruits of Toil in the London Missionary Society. London: John Snow & Co. p. 525. Retrieved September 12, 2016.
- ^ Campbell, Gwyn (October 1991). "The state and pre-colonial demographic history: the case of nineteenth century Madagascar". Journal of African History. 23 (3): 415–445. doi:10.1017/S0021853700031534.
- ^ Frédéric Randriamamonjy, Tantaran'i Madagasikara Isam-Paritra (The history of Madagascar by Region), pages 529–534.
- ^ Frédéric Randriamamonjy, Tantaran'i Madagasikara Isam-Paritra (The history of Madagascar by Region), pages 529–534.
- ^ Madagascar now has three dioceses in the autonomous Church of the Province of the Indian Ocean, part of the Anglican Communion. [1]. Retrieved September 14, 2006.
- ^ Frédéric Randriamamonjy, Tantaran'i Madagasikara Isam-Paritra (History of Madagascar by Region), pg 546.
- ^ "Dictionary of African Christian Biography". Archived from the original on August 17, 2017. Retrieved May 13, 2012.
- ^ "Objects as Envoys". Retrieved May 13, 2012.
- ^ "U.S. Department of State, Background Note: Madagascar". Retrieved May 13, 2012.
- ^ "History of the Sainte-Marie island | Princesse Bora Lodge & Spa".
- ^ Nossi-Be
- ^ See Allen and Covell, Historical Dictionary of Madagascar, pgs. xxx–xxxi
- ^ A Country Study: Madagascar Library of Congress
- ^ The Cambridge Encyclopedia of Africa (1981)
- ^ Dictionary of Wars, by George Childs Kohn (Facts on File, 1999)
- ^ "B&J": Jacob Bercovitch and Richard Jackson, International Conflict : A Chronological Encyclopedia of Conflicts and Their Management 1945–1995 (1997)
- ^ Hartman, T., A World Atlas of Military History 1945–1984 (1984)
- ^ "WHPSI": The World Handbook of Political and Social Indicators by Charles Lewis Taylor
- ^ "MALAGASY PACT SIGNED; Gives Republic Independence Within French Community". The New York Times. April 3, 1960.
- ^ a b c d e Lonely Planet: Madagascar History Archived 18 October 2007 at the Wayback Machine
- ^ a b c d BBC: Madagascar timeline
- ^ "Structural Adjustment in MADAGASCAR". Wildmadagascar.org. Retrieved August 6, 2012.
- ^ Richard R. Marcus, "Political change in Madagascar: populist democracy or neopatrimonialism by another name?" Archived February 5, 2012, at the Wayback Machine, Institute for Security Studies, Occasional Paper 89, August 2004.
- ^ "Décision n°17-HCC/D3(Empêchement)(French)". High Constitutional Court of Madagascar. Retrieved May 14, 2012.
- ^ BBC News: Ratsiraka gets 10 years hard labor
- ^ "Opinion divided over Ravalomanana", IRIN, 1 December 2006.
- ^ "Voter apathy as election day approaches", IRIN, 1 December 2006.
- ^ Johnny Hogg, "Madagascar general urges overthrow", BBC News, November 18, 2006.
- ^ "Ravalomanana likely to win presidential election" Archived 20 February 2012 at the Wayback Machine, IRIN, 11 December 2006.
- ^ 2006 presidential election results Archived April 14, 2012, at the Wayback Machine from the High Constitutional Court (in French).
- ^ "Ravalomanana swears in as Malagasy President" Archived 31 March 2012 at the Wayback Machine, Xinhua News Agency, 19 January 2007.
- ^ "Madagascar leader dissolves parliament", AFP (IOL), 24 July 2007.
- ^ Norris Trent, Catherine (January 29, 2008). "Antananarivo almost a ghost town after protests". France 24. Agence France-Presse. Archived from the original on February 1, 2009. Retrieved January 29, 2009.
- ^ "43 killed in Madagascar political violence". Associated Press. January 28, 2009. Archived from the original on February 2, 2009.
- ^ "Army calls politicians to find solution", ["RFI, in french"], 11 March 2009.
- ^ "Madagascar: Army Threatens to Intervene", ["Allafrica"], 11 March 2009.
- ^ "Madagascar soldiers seize palace". BBC. March 16, 2009. Retrieved March 16, 2009.
- ^ "Madagascar: Election Results Released". The New York Times. January 4, 2014.
- ^ "Madagascar holds long-awaited presidential elections". BBC News. October 25, 2013.
- ^ "All you need to know about high-stakes Madagascar poll".
- ^ "Madagascar court declares Rajoelina as election winner".
- ^ "Madagascar: Ravalomanana challenges results in court, Rajoelina calls for calm". December 28, 2018.
- ^ Bezain, Laetitia (April 14, 2019). "Measles outbreak kills more than 1,200 in Madagascar". AP NEWS. Retrieved April 15, 2019.
- ^ "At least 1m people facing starvation as Madagascar's drought worsens". The Guardian. May 10, 2021. Retrieved July 24, 2021.
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References
[edit]in English
[edit]- Allen, Philip M. & Maureen Covell (2005). Historical Dictionary of Madagascar 2nd ed. Lanham, Maryland: Scarecrow Press. ISBN 0-8108-4636-5.
- Allen, Philip M. (1995). Madagascar: Conflicts of Authority in the Great Island. Boulder, Colorado: Westview Press. ISBN 0-8133-0258-7.
- Blench, Roger, "Musical instruments and musical practices as markers of Austronesian expansion", 18th Congress of the Indo-Pacific Prehistory Association, Manila, March 26, 2006.
- Brown Mervyn (1978) Madagascar Rediscovered: A history from early times to independence
- Brown, M. (1978) Madagascar Rediscovered: A History from Early Times to Independence (London: Damien Tunnacliff)
- Burney, D.A., L.P. Burney, L.R. Godfrey, W.L. Jungers, S.M. Goodman, H.T. Wright, and A.J. Jull. 2004. "A chronology for late prehistoric Madagascar", Journal of Human Evolution, 47, 25–63.
- Campbell, G. (1981) Madagascar and slave trade, 1850–1895, JAH
- Colby, Reginald. "Madagascar: The Great Island" History Today (Jan 1962) 12#1 pp 33–41
- Dahl, Otto Christian, Migration from Kalimantan to Madagascar, Oslo, Norwegian University Press, 1991. (ISBN 82-00-21140-1)
- Edkvist, Ingela, The performance of tradition: an ethnography of Hira Gasy popular theatre in Madagascar, Dept. of Cultural Anthropology and Ethnology, Uppsala University, 1997.
- Hagelberg et alii, "A genetic perspective on the origins and dispersal of the Austronesians. Mitochondrial DNA variation from Madagascar to Easter islands"
- Jones, Arthur M., Africa and Indonesia. The Evidence Of The Xylophone And Other Musical And Cultural Factors, Leiden, E.J.Brill, 1971.
- Kent, Raymond K., From Madagascar to the Malagasy Republic, Greenwood Press, 1962. ISBN 0-8371-8421-5
- Rabarioelina, Ndriana (Rev. Dr.) (2010), "Biblical Relations between Israel and Madagascar", Doctoral Thesis of Theology, SAHTS, États-Unis, 2010, 458 pages. Abstract in Saint-Alcuin House Journal, Volume 8, N°1, USA, 2011. And in Library of Congress, number ISSN 1548-4459, USA.
- Randrianja Solofo, Ellis Stephen (2009), Madagascar. A short history, London, Hurst & Company, 2009.
- Razafindrazaka, Harilanto, et alii (2009) "A new deep branch of Eurasian mtDNA macrohaplogroup M reveals additional complexity regarding the settlement of Madagascar", BMC Genomics.
- Rebecca L. Green: Merina. The Rosen Publishing Group, New York, 1997, ISBN 0-8239-1991-9 (The heritage library of African peoples). Google Books
- Schmidhoffer, August, «Some Remarks On The Austronesian Background of Malagasy Music », 2005.
- Stephen Ellis and Solofo Randrianja, Madagascar – A short history, London, 2009
- Thompson, V. (1965) The Malagasy Republic: Madagascar today. Stanford University Press.
- Adelaar, K.A (2006), "The Indonesian migrations to Madagascar: Making sense of the multidisciplinary evidence", in Adelaar, Austronesian diaspora and the ethnogenesis of people in Indonesian Archipelago, LIPI PRESS.
- Mervyn Brown (2000). A History of Madagascar. Princeton: Markus Wiener Publishers. ISBN 1-55876-292-2.
- Bellwood, Peter, James J. Fox et Darrell Tryon (éds.), The Austronesians Historical and Comparative Perspectives, Australian National University, 2006
- Mutibwa, P.M. (1989). "Madagascar 1800-80". In J. F. Ade Ajayi (ed.). Africa in the Nineteenth Century until the 1880s. General History of Africa. Vol. 6. UNESCO. pp. 412+. ISBN 978-0435948122.
- Hurles, Matthew E.; Sykes, Bryan C.; Jobling, Mark A.; Forster, Peter (May 2005). "The Dual Origin of the Malagasy in Island Southeast Asia and East Africa: Evidence from Maternal and Paternal Lineages". The American Journal of Human Genetics. 76 (5): 894–901. doi:10.1086/430051. PMC 1199379. PMID 15793703.
- Hurles, Matthew E.; Sykes, Bryan C.; Jobling, Mark A.; Forster, Peter (May 2005). "The Dual Origin of the Malagasy in Island Southeast Asia and East Africa: Evidence from Maternal and Paternal Lineages". The American Journal of Human Genetics. 76 (5): 894–901. doi:10.1086/430051. PMC 1199379. PMID 15793703. (ISSN 0002-9297)
in French
[edit]- Charlotte Liliane Rabesahala-Randriamananoro, Ambohimanga-Rova : approche anthropologique de la civilisation merina (Madagascar), Paris, Le Publieur, 2006, 393 p. (ISBN 2-85194-307-3. Texte remanié d’une thèse soutenue à l’Université de La Réunion en 2002. (French)
- Rajaonarimanana, Narivelo (1990), Savoirs arabico-malgaches : la tradition manuscrite des devins Antemoro Anakara (Madagascar), Institut national des langues et civilisations orientales. (French)
- Ramamonjy, Georges (1952), "De quelques attitudes et coutumes merina", dans Mémoires de l'Institut scientifique de Madagascar (Tananarive), série C, Sciences humaines, 1 (2), 1952, p. 181–196. (French)
- Raombana (l'historien) (1809–1855), "Histoires", Edition Ambozontany, Fianarantsoa, 3 Volumes. (French)
- Rombaka, Jacques Philippe (1963), Tantaran-drazana Antemoro-Anteony, Antananarivo, Imprimerie LMS, pp. 10–11. (French)
- Rombaka, Jacques Philippe (1970), Fomban-drazana Antemoro – usages et coutumes antemoro, Ambozontany, Fianarantsoa, 121 p. (French)
- (in French) de Coppet, Marcel, Madagascar, Paris, Encyclopédie de l'Empire français, 2 vol. 1947
- (in French) Deschamps, Hubert, Madagascar, Paris: Presses Universitaires de France, 1976.
- (in French) Domenichini-Ramiaramana, Michel, Instruments de musique des Hautes-Terres de Madagascar, Master's thesis Paris 1982.
- (in French) Fremigacci, Jean "La vérité sur la grande révolte de Madagascar", dans L’Histoire n°318, mars 2007, p. 36–43
- (in French) Ricaut et alii (2009) A new deep branch of Eurasian mtDNA macrohaplogroup M reveals additional complexity regarding the settlement of Madagascar, BMC Genomics
- (in French) Sachs, Curt, Les instruments de musique de Madagascar, Paris, Institut d’ethnologie, 1938.
- (in French) Simon, Pierre (2006), La langue des ancêtres. Une périodisation du malgache de l’origine au XVIe siècle, Paris, L’Harmattan.
- (in French) Vérin, Pierre, Madagascar, Paris, Karthala, 2000.
in Malagasy
[edit]- Ramilison, Emmanuel (Pastor) (1951), Andriantomara-Andriamamilazabe. Loharanon' ny Andriana nanjaka eto Imerina, Imprimerie Ankehitriny. (Malagasy)
- Rasamimanana, Joseph (Dr.) (1909) et Louis de Gonzague Razafindrazaka (Governor), Ny Andriantompokoindrindra, Antananarivo, 50 pages. (Malagasy)
- Ravelojaona (Pastor) (1937–1970), Firaketana ny Fiteny sy ny Zavatra Malagasy, Encyclopedic Dictionary, Antananarivo, 5 Volumes. (Malagasy)
External links
[edit]- Country Profile of Madagascar, U.S. Department of State
- Country Profile of Madagascar, CIA – The World Factbook
- Newsletter article on the first settlers of Madagascar
- A Historical Timeline for Madagascar
- Madagascar: a Portuguese settlement: the Portuguese fort near Tolanaro
- Royal House of Madagascar