Radama I's interest in modernizing Madagascar along …

Years: 1828 - 1839

Radama I's interest in modernizing Madagascar along Western lines extends to social and political matters.

He had organized a cabinet and encouraged the Protestant London Missionary Society to establish schools and churches and to introduce the printing press—a move that is to have far-reaching implications for the country.

The society will make nearly half a million converts, and its teachers have devised a written form of the local language, Malagasy, using the Latin alphabet.

By 1828 several thousand persons, primarily Merina, have become literate, and a few young persons are being sent to Britain for schooling.

Later the Merina dialect of Malagasy will become the official language.

Malagasy-language publications are established and circulated among the Merina-educated elite; by 1896 some one hundred and sixty-four thousand children, mainly Merina and Betsileo, will have attended the mission's primary schools.

Along with new ideas come some development of local manufacturing.

Much productive time is spent, however, in military campaigns to expand territory and acquire slaves for trade.

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