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Africa
Madagascar
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As part of
East Gondwana, the territory of Madagascar split from Africa approximately
160 million years ago; the island of Madagascar was created when
it separated from the Indian subcontinent 80 to 100 million years
ago. Malagasy mythology portrays a group of African pygmy like
people called the Vazimba as the original inhabitants of Madagascar,
however most archaeologists estimate that the human settlement
of Madagascar happened between 200 and 500 A.D., when seafarers
from southeast Asia (probably from Borneo or the southern Celebes)
arrived in outrigger sailing canoes. Bantu settlers probably crossed
the Mozambique Channel
to Madagascar at about the same time or shortly afterwards. However,
Malagasy tradition and ethnographic evidence suggests that they
may have been preceded by the Mikea hunter gatherers. The Anteimoro
who established a kingdom in Southern Madagascar in the Middle
Ages trace their origin to migrants from Somalia.
The written
history of Madagascar begins in the 7th century, when Muslims
established trading posts along the northwest coast. During the
Middle Ages, the island's kings began to extend their power through
trade with their Indian Ocean neighbours, notably Arab, Persian
and Somali traders
who connected Madagascar with East Africa, the Middle East and
India.
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. Madagascar
functioned in the East African Middle Ages as a contact port for
the other Swahili
seaport city-states such as Sofala, Kilwa, Mombasa and Zanzibar.
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