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Malagasy Translation Services
Verbatim Solutions provides professional, high quality Malagasy to English translations and English to Malagasy translations. Our Malagasy translation services will help you maximize your global strategy.
Native Speaking Malagasy Translators
Verbatim Solutions Malagasy translation teams are professional linguists performing translation from English to Malagasy and Malagasy to English for a variety of documents in various industries including:
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The written
history of Madagascar began in the seventh century A.D., when Arabs
established trading posts along the northwest coast. However,the
first people who came to Madagascar were from Polynesia, mostly from
Indonesia . This explains the malagasy features which are a mixture
of Asian and African, as well as of the Arabs who came later. Because
of tropical storms which commonly affect the coast, some early
settlers left the coast and went to live in the centre of the island
in the mountains where the weather is cooler and less windy. The
people who live in the mountains today have preserved many of the
Asian features. European contact began in the 1500s, when Portuguese
sea captain Diego Dias sighted the island after his ship became
separated from a fleet bound for India. In the late 17th century, the
French established trading posts along the east coast. From about
1774 to 1824, it was a favorite haunt for pirates, including
Americans, one of whom brought Malagasy rice to South Carolina.
Beginning in the 1790s, Merina rulers succeeded in
establishing hegemony over the major part of the island, including
the coast. In 1817, the Merina ruler, King Radama I, and the British
governor of Mauritius concluded a treaty abolishing the slave trade,
which had been important in Madagascar's economy. In return, the
island received British military and financial assistance. British
influence remained strong for several decades, during which the
Merina court was converted to Presbyterianism, Congregationalism, and
Anglicanism.
The British accepted the imposition of a French
protectorate over Madagascar in 1885 in return for eventual control
over Zanzibar (now part of Tanzania) and as part of an overall
definition of spheres of influence in the area. Absolute French
control over Madagascar was established by military force in 1895-96,
and the Merina monarchy was abolished.
Malagasy troops fought
in France, Morocco, and Syria during World War I. After France fell
to the Germans, Madagascar was administered first by the Vichy
government and then in 1942 by the British, whose troops occupied the
strategic island to preclude its seizure by the Japanese. The Free
French received the island from the United Kingdom in 1943.
In
1947, with French prestige at low ebb, a nationalist uprising was
suppressed only after several months of bitter fighting. The French
subsequently established reformed institutions in 1956 under the Loi
Cadre (Overseas Reform Act), and Madagascar moved peacefully toward
independence. The Malagasy Republic was proclaimed on October 14,
1958, as an autonomous state within the French Community. A period of
provisional government ended with the adoption of a constitution in
1959 and full independence on June 26, 1960.
During
1992-1993, free presidential and National Assembly elections were
held, ending 17 years of single-party rule.
