Malagasy workers running an iron forge. |
Chinatown, Port Louis Mauritius, ~1860s |
Bezanozano porters carrying cattle skins to Toamasina |
From Aksum to Zimbabwe, Casablanca to Cape Town, learn about the fascinating civilizations and stories of Africa on the first dedicated Pre-Colonial African history podcast.
Malagasy workers running an iron forge. |
Chinatown, Port Louis Mauritius, ~1860s |
Bezanozano porters carrying cattle skins to Toamasina |
By 1817, Toamasina (Tamatave) was the busiest port on the east coast of Madagascar |
Workers unload cargo from an outrigger canoe in Toamasina, circa 1880. |
Toamasina gave Imerina its first major port in its history, as well as a direct line of communication with the outside world.
Radama (on the upper left horse) inspects an army |
Using resources acquired from his deal with the British, Radama assembled a modern army equipped with the latest firearms, artillery, and even horses, an otherwise unknown sight on Madagascar. The new Merina army proved unstoppable, with only the former hegemons of Madagascar, the Sakalava kingdoms, putting up successful long term resistance during Radama's reign.
Map of Radama's Conquests of Madagascar |
The king's palace: Tranovola or the Silver House |
Radama, as depicted in an illustration by William Fitzwilliam Owen |
If his father is the most remembered king in Madagascar, Radama is probably the best-known Malagasy king in the rest of the world. Radama is famous not only for leading the first major push to unify his home island but also for his later efforts to modernize and industrialize the Merina Empire. But how did this fascinating man come to power in the first place? Today, we track the rise of Radama from the heir to the kingdom to the man synonymous with the formation of Malagasy identity.
The beginning of Radama's reign was full of chaos. Even before taking the throne, he had already been the target of multiple assassination attempts by brothers, forced into an unhappy marriage, and served in the army on multiple campaigns. After taking the throne, he had to put down rebellions by his Betsileo and Sihanaka subjects.
Ifanadiana, Madagascar. The hill in the background is the site of the "martyrdom" of the Betsileo soldiers. |
A pirate graveyard on Nosy Boraha |
Radama's greatest ambition for conquest would have to wait, though. He specifically desired to conquer the eastern coast of Madagascar. The eastern coast had recently undergone a cultural transformation with the arrival of swarms of European and American pirates to the region. One pirate from New York even established a colony on the island of Nosy Boraha. The arrival of pirates began a cultural and political transformation on the east coast, with some Malagasy using pirates as mercenaries, trading with the seafarers, and some even marrying and having children with pirates. Malagasy who adopted elements of European culture from European pirates and merchants were known as Malagasy Creoles, while those who came from a mixed background were called Zana Malata.
A photo of the old French fort at Fort Dauphin (taken hundreds of years after its abandonment.) |
Our latest premium episode focuses on one of Madagascar's most interesting mixed-race historical figures: the pirate turned king of Madagascar, Abraham Samuel. Listen here.
A 1900 sketch of a Betsileo man in traditional attire. |
Zoma market, for centuries the largest marketplace in Imerina, was one of many markets established by Andrianampoinimerina |
1905 Portrait of Andrianampoinimerina by Philippe-Auguste Ramanankirahina |
The Rova of Ambohimanga remains one of the best-preserved and most visited Merina historical sites to this day. |
The Hill of Ikaloy, the capital of the Zafimamy Kingdom. |
During this period of civil war, the Sakalava Kingdoms of Menabe and Boeny exploited Merina polities for tribute payments of cattle and slaves in exchange for military assistance. |
The Spanish "Real de a Ocho" or "Piece of Eight", the coins which Rakotomavo sought to mint |
Enslaved man on a sugar plantation in Mauritius |
The old royal residence at Ambohidratrimo, where Andiramasinavalona was held prisoner. |
The 18th century will be a painful time for the people of Imerina. The once proud kingdom will devolve into a deadly multilateral civil war, splitting into dozens of smaller kingdoms, each suffering from intermittent famine and domination by foreign enemies. How could the kingdom of Andriamasinavalona, rapidly rising to become a major player in Madagascar, fall so far. The inciting incident lays at the feet of the otherwise great king Andriamasinavalona.
The mpanjaka Imerina had spread his kingdom several times beyond what his predecessors would have even considered possible. Could such a large kingdom survive in highland Madagascar? Andriamasinavalona believed that the answer was "no." Instead, he favored transforming the Merina kingdom into a confederation of four smaller states called Imerina Efa Toko, or "Imerina like the Legs of a Cooking Pot." The king's advisor Andriamampandry repeated warned him against the plan, cautioning that the newly empowered princes would immediately seek to make war with each other. But Andriamasinavalona persisted.
The public square at the Rova of Antananarivo, where Andriamasinavalona announced the new policy of Imerina Efa Toko |
This policy backfired immensely. Almost immediately upon granting his sons sovereign power, they began quarreling. These early disagreements culminated in the prince of Ambohidratrimo luring the father into his fief by intentionally provoking the ire of his subjects, asking his father for assistance against a rebellion, and then locking his father in a basement when he came to assist the prince. The plan worked for several years, with the prince providing commands supposedly based on his father's wishes. However, the other sons soon grew suspicious, and launched a rescue operation for Andrimasinvalona. While the prince of Ambohidratrimo was defeated and the other sons pledged an oath of peace after their father's death not long after his liberation, the kingdom still fell apart into warring duchies soon after. Join us next episode to see how that goes.