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Showing posts from May, 2018

Final Multi-Media Project: Presentation

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Final Multi-Media Project: Written Portion

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       Madagascar is a beautiful island located about 250 miles off the east African coast in the Indian Ocean. It is the fourth largest island in the world. The capital of Madagascar is called Antananarivo and is in the Central Highlands. The island is approximately 227,000 square miles and can have mountains that reach over 8,000 feet. Madagascar only experiences two climatic seasons a year: there is a hot and rainy season that lasts from November to April and a dry, cooler season that lasts from May to October. Because of its location, Madagascar often experiences cyclones created by the southeast trade winds. These cyclones have, in the past, often caused a lot of damage. While Madagascar has cyclones on one part of the island, there is also an area that Madagascar is very well known for, the tropical rain forest located in the eastern part of the country. This rain forest is home to over 150,000 species of flora and fauna, most of which are unique for...

Change in Madagascar - Borders, Politics, National Identity

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   Madagascar has changed hands a few times over the many years that the Africa nation has existed. Around 1500 the Portuguese encountered Madagascar which also lead to many other European nations having an interest in the island.    For many years, the Portuguese and other European nations tried to establish settlements on the island of Madagascar, but all their efforts failed. In the seventeenth century, Europeans described Madagascar as being a landscape of small kingdoms. [1] Eventually a settlement was established in Madagascar, specifically on Ile Sainte Marie, which became the home for at least 45 pirates. These pirates were supported by the small kingdoms in Madagascar and often married Malagasy women, sometimes even members of royal families. [2]    Between the 18 th and the 19 th centuries, three main kingdoms appeared: the Merina in the central plateau, the Sakalava in the west, and Betsimisraka in the east. The Merina kingdom event...

Missions in Madagascar

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   Christianity was not the first religion to get to the island of Madagascar. Around the Middle Ages, Islam was brought to the island by Arab and Somali Muslim traders but failed to take hold in several southeastern coastal communities. However, a few Islamic schools were established along the eastern coast. Today Muslims make up about 7% of Madagascar’s population.    The Malagasy people, especially in Imerina, were oddly receptive of European ideas and influences which was unique in an African country in the nineteenth century. Christianity was introduced to the island of Madagascar by British missionaries between 1818 and 1895. These dates are from when the first British missionaries arrived on the island to the year when Madagascar was conquered by the French and lost their independence.    Formal education began in 1820 at the Palace School in Antananarivo but Christianity itself was not taught until 1829 when it was integrated into and taug...