The population of Antananarivo is 1,391,433. Over 50 percent of Madagascar is concentrated in or around the capital. If you travel to Madagascar by plane this may as well be your very first opportunity for sight-seeing. Antananarivo is located in the central highlands; there are wooden houses and royal tombs, The Pink Baroque Andafiavaratra Palace, in the city center is a heart-shaped lake Anosy is ringed by jacaranda trees. The Pink Baroque Andafiavaratra Palace is located on the highest hilltop in Antananarivo. It no serves the purpose of a museum with over a thousand objects pertaining to the historical importance of Madagascar. Lake Anosy is an artificial lake in the southern part of Antananarivo. It is surrounded by beautiful lavender colored jacaranda trees. Imagine purple colored weeping willows they are simply amazing surrounding the coast of the …show more content…
This royal palace used to be the residence of Prime Minister Rainilaiarivony of Madagascar. Nor is it the fact that he governed the island kingdom in the late nineteenth century. The Importance is what this museum contains; it contains bits and pieces from The Rova of Antananarivo, a royal palace complex that served the home of the sovereigns of the Kingdom of Imerina in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries. It was also used for the rulers of the Kingdom of Madagascar in the nineteenth century. Nearby is the fortified village of Ambohimanga, successive Merina kings continued to rule from the site until the fall of the monarchy in 1896. The reign of King Andrianampoinimerina reunified Imerina after seventy-seven years of civil war. The largest and most prominent structure in this area was Manjakamiadana, also known as the "Queen's Palace" after Queen the first. The unique wooden palace was built between 1839 and 1841 by Frenchman Jean Laborde. In 1867 the palace was encased in stone for Queen Ranavalona the second by Scotsman James Cameron, an artisan follower of the London Missionary Society. The nearby Tranovola, a smaller wooden fortress constructed in 1819 by Creole trader Louis Gros for King Radama the first, was the earliest multi-storey building with verandas in the Rova. The replica offered by Tranovola transformed architecture throughout the highlands over the