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==History== {{see also|Timeline of Antananarivo}} ===Kingdom of Imerina=== [[File:Antananarivo Madagascar old city gate.JPG|thumbnail|left|Old [[Architecture of Madagascar|city gate]]]] Antananarivo was already a major city before the colonial era. After expelling the Vazimba who inhabited the town at the peak of Analamanga hill, Andrianjaka chose the site for his ''[[Rova (Madagascar)|rova]]'' (fortified royal compound), which expanded over time to enclose the [[Rova of Antananarivo|royal palaces]] and the tombs of Merina royalty.{{sfn|Government of France|1898|pp=918–919}} The city was established in around 1610{{sfn|Desmonts|2004|pp=114–115}} or 1625<ref>Roman Adrian Cybriwsky, ''Capital Cities around the World: An Encyclopedia of Geography, History, and Culture'', ABC-CLIO, USA, 2013, p. 15</ref> according to varying accounts. Early Merina kings used ''[[Corvée|fanampoana]]'' (statute labor) to construct a massive system of irrigated paddy fields and dikes around the city to provide adequate rice for the growing population. These paddy fields, of which the largest is called the Betsimitatatra, continue to produce rice.{{sfn|Callet|1908|p=522}} [[File:Antananarivo Madagascar andohalo plaza.JPG|thumbnail|Sovereigns addressed the public at the historic town square of Andohalo.]] Successive Merina sovereigns ruled over the [[Kingdom of Imerina]] from Analamanga through King Andriamasinavalona's reign. This sovereign gave the growing city its current name; he established the Andohalo town square outside the town gate, where all successive sovereigns delivered their royal speeches and announcements to the public, and assigned the names of numerous locations within the city based on the names of similar sites in the nearby village of Antananarivokely.{{sfn|Callet|1908|pp=654–656}} Andriamasinavalona designated specific territories for the ''[[hova (Madagascar)|hova]]'' (commoners) and each ''[[andriana]]'' (noble) subcaste, both within the neighborhoods of Antananarivo and in the countryside surrounding the capital. These territorial divisions were strictly enforced; members of subcastes were required to live within their designated territories and were not authorized to stay for extended periods in the territories reserved for others.{{sfn|Callet|1908|pp=563–565}} Numerous ''[[Fady (taboo)|fady]]'' (taboos), including injunctions against the construction of wooden houses by non-nobles{{sfn|Acquier|1997|pp=63–64}} and the presence of swine within the city limits, were imposed.{{sfn|Oliver|1886|p=221}} Upon Andriamasinavalona's death in 1710, Imerina split into four warring quadrants, and Antananarivo was made the capital of the southern district.<ref name = UNESCO>{{cite web |title=Royal Hill of Ambohimanga |publisher=UNESCO World Heritage Centre |year=2012 |url=https://whc.unesco.org/en/list/950 |access-date=22 September 2012 |archive-date=June 29, 2011 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110629070952/https://whc.unesco.org/en/list/950/ |url-status=live }}</ref> During the 77-year civil war that followed, the eastern district's capital at [[Ambohimanga]] rose in prominence.{{sfn|Nativel|2005|p=30}} The last king of Ambohimanga, [[Andrianampoinimerina]], successfully conquered Antananarivo in 1793;<ref>{{cite journal |last=Berg |first=Gerald M. |year=1988 |title=Sacred Acquisition: Andrianampoinimerina at Ambohimanga, 1777–1790 |journal=The Journal of African History |volume=29 |issue=2 |pages=191–211 |doi=10.1017/S002185370002363X |s2cid=153668345}}</ref> he reunited the provinces of Imerina, ending the civil war. He moved the kingdom's political capital back to Antananarivo in 1794,<ref name = UNESCO/> and declared Ambohimanga the kingdom's spiritual capital, a role it still maintains.{{sfn|Campbell|2012|p=454}} Andrianampoinimerina created a large marketplace in Analakely, establishing the city's economic center.{{sfn|Fournet-Guérin|2007|p=34}} ===Kingdom of Madagascar=== [[File:Detail of statue in lake anosy in Antananarivo Madagascar 2013.JPG|left|thumbnail|[[Lake Anosy]] was created in the 19th century to provide hydraulic power to industrial factories.]] By the time Andrianampoinimerina's son [[Radama I]] had ascended the throne upon his father's death in 1810, Antananarivo was the largest and most economically important city on the island, with a population of over 80,000 inhabitants.<ref name="Stats"/> Radama opened the city to the first European settlers, artisan missionaries of the [[London Missionary Society]] (LMS) who arrived in 1820 and opened the city's first public schools.{{sfn|Ade Ajayi|1998|p=165}} [[James Cameron (missionary)|James Cameron]] introduced brickmaking to the island and created [[Lake Anosy]] to generate hydraulic power for industrial manufacturing.{{sfn|Nativel|2005|pp=76–66}} Radama established a military training ground on a flat plain called Mahamasina at the base of Analamanga near the lake. Radama's subjugation of other [[Malagasy people|Malagasy ethnic groups]] brought nearly two-thirds of the island under his control. The British diplomats who concluded trade treaties with Radama recognized him as the "ruler of Madagascar", a position he and his successors claimed despite never managing to impose their authority over the larger portion of the island's south. Thereafter, Merina sovereigns declared Antananarivo the capital of the entire island.{{sfn|Ade Ajayi|1998|p=167}} [[File:Antananarivo07.jpg|thumb|[[Ranavalona I]] built the staircases connecting the market at Analakely to Antaninarenina (pictured) and Ambondrona in 1832.<ref name = stairs/>]] Radama's successor [[Ranavalona I]] invited a shipwrecked craftsman named [[Jean Laborde]] to construct the tomb of Prime Minister [[Rainiharo]], and Manjakamiadana (built 1839–1841), the largest palace at the Rova. Laborde also produced a wide range of industrial products at factories in the highland village [[Mantasoa]] and a foundry in the Antananarivo neighborhood of Isoraka.{{sfn|Oliver|1886|p=78}} Ranavalona oversaw improvements to the city's infrastructure, including the construction of the city's two largest staircases at Antaninarenina and Ambondrona, which connect ''la ville moyenne'' ("the middle town") to the central marketplace at Analakely.<ref name = stairs>{{cite news |last=Rakotoarilala |first=Ninaivo |title=D'Antaninarenina à Ambondrona: Andry Rajoelina revisite son adolescence |newspaper=Madagascar Tribune |date=15 January 2013 |url=http://www.madagascar-tribune.com/Andry-Rajoelina-revisite-son,18358.html |access-date=3 June 2013 |language=fr |archive-date=February 8, 2021 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210208164519/https://www.madagascar-tribune.com/Andry-Rajoelina-revisite-son,18358.html |url-status=live }}</ref> In 1867, following a series of fires in the capital, Queen [[Ranavalona II]] issued a royal decree that permitted the use of stone and brick construction in buildings other than tombs.{{sfn|Nativel|2005|pp=76–66}} LMS missionaries' first brick house was built in 1869; it bore a blend of English, Creole, and Malagasy design and served as a model for a new style of house that rapidly spread throughout the capital and across the highlands. Termed the ''trano gasy'' ("Malagasy house"), it is typically a two-story, brick building with four columns on the front that support a wooden veranda. In the latter third of the 19th century, these houses quickly replaced most of the traditional wooden houses of the city's aristocratic class.{{sfn|Nativel|2005|p=327}} The growing number of [[Christianity in Madagascar|Christians in Imerina]] prompted the construction of stone churches throughout the highlands, as well as four memorial churches on key sites of martyrdom among early Malagasy Christians under the reign of Ranavalona I.{{sfn|Nativel|2005|pp=122–124}} [[File:Palais d'Andafiavaratra 01.jpg|thumb|left|[[Andafiavaratra Palace]] was the home of Prime Minister [[Rainilaiarivony]].]] Until the mid-19th century, the city remained largely concentrated around the Rova of Antananarivo on the highest peak, an area today referred to as ''la haute ville'' or ''la haute'' ("upper town"). As the population grew, the city expanded to the west; by the late 19th century it extended to the northern hilltop neighborhood of Andohalo, an area of low prestige until British missionaries made it their preferred residential district and built one of the city's memorial churches here from 1863 to 1872.{{sfn|Shillington|2004|p=158}} From 1864 to 1894, Prime Minister [[Rainilaiarivony]] governed Madagascar alongside three successive queens, [[Rasoherina]], Ranavalona II and [[Ranavalona III]], effecting policies that further transformed the city. In 1881, he reinstated mandatory universal education first introduced in 1820 under Radama I, requiring the construction of numerous schools and colleges, including teacher training colleges staffed by missionaries and the nation's first pharmacy, medical college, and modern hospital.{{sfn|Ade Ajayi|1998|p=439}} Rainilaiarivony built the [[Andafiavaratra Palace]] in 1873 as his residence and office at a site near the royal palace.{{sfn|Nativel|2005|p=25}} ===French Madagascar=== [[File:Presidential office in Antananarivo Madagascar.JPG|thumbnail|The colonial French Residency serves today as a presidential office and has been renamed the [[Ambohitsorohitra Palace]].]] The [[French Madagascar|French military invaded Antananarivo]] in September 1894, prompting the queen's surrender after a cannon shell blasted a hole through a building at the Rova, causing major casualties. The damage was never repaired. Andohalo square was remodeled to feature a gazebo, walkways, and planted landscaping. Claiming the island as a colony, the French administration retained Antananarivo as its capital and transcribed its name as Tananarive.{{sfn|Appiah|Gates|2010|p=114}} They chose Antaninarenina as the site for the French Governor General's Residency; upon independence, it was renamed [[Ambohitsorohitra Palace]] and converted into presidential offices. Under the French, tunnels were constructed through two of the city's largest hills, connecting disparate districts and facilitating the town's expansion. Streets were laid with cobblestones and later paved; sewer systems and electricity infrastructure was introduced. Water, previously obtained from springs at the foot of the hill, was brought from the [[Ikopa River]].{{sfn|Shillington|2004|p=159}} This period saw a major expansion of ''la ville moyenne'', which spread along the lower hilltops and slopes of the city centered around the French residency. Modern urban planning was applied in ''la ville basse'' ("lower town"), which expanded from the base of the city's central hills into the surrounding rice fields. Major boulevards like ''Avenue de l'Indépendance'', planned commercial areas like the arcades lining either side of the avenue, large parks, city squares, and other landmark features were built.{{sfn|Shillington|2004|p=159}} A railway system connecting Soarano station at one end of the ''Avenue de l'Indépendance'' in Antananarive with [[Toamasina]] and [[Fianarantsoa]] was established in 1897.{{sfn|McLean Thompson|Adloff|1965|p=271}} Beyond these planned spaces, neighborhoods densely populated by working-class Malagasy expanded without state oversight or control.{{sfn|Shillington|2004|p=159}} [[File:Beautiful jacaranda Antananarivo Madagascar.jpg|thumbnail|left|Jacarandas planted during the [[French Madagascar|French colonial period]] bloom in October around [[Lake Anosy]].]] The city expanded rapidly after [[World War II]];{{sfn|Shillington|2004|p=159}} by 1950 its population had grown to 175,000. Roads connecting Antananarivo to surrounding towns were expanded and paved. The first international airport was constructed at [[Arivonimamo]], {{cvt|45|km|0}} outside the city; this was replaced in 1967 with [[Ivato International Airport]] approximately {{cvt|15|km|0}} from the city center. The [[University of Antananarivo]] was constructed in the Ankatso neighborhood and the [[Museum of Ethnology and Paleontology]] was also built. A city plan written in 1956 created suburban zones where large houses and gardens were established for the wealthy. In 1959, severe floods in ''la ville basse'' prompted the building of large-scale embankments along the edges of the Betsimitatatra rice fields and the establishment of new ministerial complexes on newly drained land in the Anosy neighborhood.{{sfn|Shillington|2004|p=159}} ===Post-independence=== [[File:Madagascar senate.JPG|thumbnail|Senate building]] After independence in 1960, the pace of growth increased further. The city's population reached 1.4 million by the end of the 20th century; in 2013, it was estimated at nearly 2.1 million.<ref name = newpop>{{cite web |title=2005 population estimates for cities in Madagascar |url=http://www.mongabay.com/igapo/2005_world_city_populations/Madagascar.html |access-date=1 April 2014 |archive-date=December 24, 2018 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20181224192039/https://data.mongabay.com/igapo/2005_world_city_populations/Madagascar.html |url-status=live }}</ref> Uncontrolled [[urban sprawl]] has challenged the city's infrastructure, producing shortages of clean water and electricity, sanitation and public health problems, and heavy traffic congestion.{{sfn|Shillington|2004|p=159}} There are more than 5,000 church buildings in the city and its suburbs, including an [[Anglicanism|Anglican]] and a [[Immaculate Conception Cathedral, Antananarivo|Roman Catholic cathedral]]. Antananarivo is the [[see city]] of Madagascar's [[Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Antananarivo|Roman Catholic Archdiocese]]. The city has repeatedly been the site of large demonstrations and violent political clashes, including the 1972 ''[[rotaka]]'' that brought down President [[Philibert Tsiranana]] and the [[2009 Malagasy political crisis]], which resulted in [[Andry Rajoelina]] replacing [[Marc Ravalomanana]] as head of state.<ref>{{cite web |url=https://www.google.com/hostednews/afp/article/ALeqM5ifdczZtXnRO9VQb3h7Xm5hDhdxeA |title=AFP: Hundreds protest Madagascar mayor's sacking |date=4 February 2009 |access-date=25 March 2013 |archive-date=February 26, 2014 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20140226122257/http://www.google.com/hostednews/afp/article/ALeqM5ifdczZtXnRO9VQb3h7Xm5hDhdxeA |url-status=dead }}</ref> The [[2022 Antananarivo floods]] hit the city in January of that year, causing multiple deaths and significant damage to almost 7,000 houses.<ref name=":4">{{cite web |date=18 January 2022 |title=10 killed by floods in Madagascar |url=https://www.africanews.com/2022/01/18/10-killed-by-floods-in-madagascar/ |url-status=live |archive-url=https://ghostarchive.org/archive/20220124230142/https://www.africanews.com/2022/01/18/10-killed-by-floods-in-madagascar/ |archive-date=24 January 2022 |access-date=18 January 2022 |publisher=[[Africanews]]}}</ref> On 26 August 2023, at least 12 people died during a [[Crowd collapses and crushes|crush incident]] at the [[Mahamasina Municipal Stadium]], during the opening of [[Indian Ocean Island Games]].<ref>{{Cite web |date=2023-08-26 |title=Several dead in Madagascar stadium crush at opening of Indian Ocean Island Games |url=https://www.france24.com/en/africa/20230826-several-dead-in-madagascar-stadium-crush-at-opening-of-indian-ocean-island-games |access-date=2023-11-21 |website=France 24 |language=en |archive-date=November 21, 2023 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20231121025739/https://www.france24.com/en/africa/20230826-several-dead-in-madagascar-stadium-crush-at-opening-of-indian-ocean-island-games |url-status=live }}</ref>
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