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===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=76β66}} 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 1839β1841), 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 Γ 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=76β66}} 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=122β124}} [[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}}
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