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Entrée1  Madagascar before the Conquest    
Sous-titre  2  The island, the country, and the people
Partie du discours  3  nom propre (titre de livre) [Liste complète]
Auteur  4  Sibree James
Editions  5  , 1896. Pages: 382
Extraits 
1895/11/13
12
A leisurely ride of about two hours brought us early in the afternoon to Ambatomanga... Going to the tomb on the rock above the town, just before sunset, the great, bare hills, with their bones of rock showing through the skin of turf; the bright, fresh green of the newly planted rice-fields; the red clay roads on the brownishgreen hills, all told us we were again in the heart of Madagascar.
1896
26
The ancient graves of the Vazimba, the aboriginal inhabitants of the interior, are found scattered over the central province. These are shapeless heaps of stone, generally overshadowed by a fano tree, a species of acacia, which has a semi-sacred character, its seeds being used in divination.
1896
26
A considerable number of upright stones, termed vatolahy (lit. "male stones"), huge undressed blocks of granite, are also found on the hills and downs. These are memorials of former chieftains, or of battles of the old times.
1896
54
In the foreground, stretching away many miles, is the great rice-plain of Betsimitatatra, from which numbers of low red hills, most of them with villages, rise like islands out of a green sea when the rice is growing; along the plain the river Ikopa can be seen, winding its way north-westwards to join the Betsiboka; the united streams, with many tributaries, flowing into the sea at the Bay of Bombetoka. This great plain, "the granary of Antananarivo," was formerly an immense marsh, and earlier still a lake; but since the embanking of the river by some of the early kings of Imerina, it has become the finest rice-plain in the island, and, with its connected valleys, furnishes the bulk of the food of the people of the central province.

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