Mp. Pearson, CLOSE ENCOUNTERS OF THE WORST KIND - MALAGASY RESISTANCE AND COLONIALDISASTERS IN SOUTHERN MADAGASCAR, World archaeology, 28(3), 1997, pp. 393-417
The arrival of Europeans on the southern coasts of Madagascar in the s
ixteenth to eighteenth centuries had profound if unusual consequences
for indigenous societies. Certain of these, the Tandroy, Karembola and
Mahafaly peoples, actively shunned contact and trade with the outside
rs, although they imported large numbers of trade guns. The historical
evidence indicates, however, that these slave-based societies did not
provide substantial numbers of slaves to the Europeans. Descriptions
of their isolation and endemic warfare can be matched by archaeologica
l evidence for major discontinuities in the settlement patterns of the
sixteenth to seventeenth centuries, when settlements in the river val
leys were abandoned for defensive locations in the waterless southern
plain. Whilst warfare may have been a feature of the expanding politie
s in the sixteenth century and later, it was undoubtedly exacerbated b
y the arrival of French troops and guns in the seventeenth century. Th
e two European trading/colonial interventions in the south, at St Augu
stine and at Fort Dauphin, were unsuccessful not only because of their
involvement in this warfare but also because colonists did not fully
understand the central position of women within trading networks and p
olitical alliances.