|
Kilima.com - an international online store featuring Art, Film, History, Literature,
Music and Travel... |
|
|
|
|
Female Caligula: Ranavalona, The Mad Queen of Madagascar | 
enlarge | Author: Keith Laidler Publisher: Wiley Category: Book
List Price: $24.95 Buy Used: $16.79 You Save: $8.16 (33%)
New (19) Used (10) from $16.79
Rating: 4 reviews Sales Rank: 1004841
Media: Hardcover Pages: 232 Number Of Items: 1 Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.9 Dimensions (in): 8.6 x 5.3 x 0.9
ISBN: 047002223X Dewey Decimal Number: 969.101092 EAN: 9780470022238 ASIN: 047002223X
Publication Date: November 18, 2005 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days Shipping: Expedited shipping available Shipping: International shipping available Condition: Pages are clean. Hardcover binding is secure. Dust jacket is in good shape with some creasing on back and front. Have questions? We're happy to provide more information about any item in our store. We pack carefully, ship daily and email tracking numbers to US buyers. Our customer service is friendly and we follow Amazon's return policies. International & APO orders are welcome!
| |
| Also Available In:
|
| Similar Items:
|
| Editorial Reviews:
Product Description 'The seven christians stood together in the bright sunlight, bound with ropes singing a hyme to their foreign saviour as the spearmen advanced. Around them a croud of jostling men, women and children, more than sixty thousand strong...cheered enthusiastically as the spears were driven home and, one by one, the men and women fell and writhed on the sandy ground, their hymn fading slowly into silence...above the still writhing bodies, on a ridge, a score of crosses stood in mute witness, carrying their ghastly burdens, some of whom still lived despite the day and a half they had hung upon the wood. As European colonists scrambled for control of Africa, a leader arose in the red island of Madagascar who, through ruthless determination thwarted the combined ambitions of all the major world powers. That leader and the author of this holocaust was no warrior but a diminutive woman of middle years, Ranavalona-Manjaka Queen of Madagascar, know to her subjects more simply as Ma Dieu. Under Ranavalona's despotic rule, hundreds of thousands of her people, possibly one-half of Madagascar's entire population, were murdered, starved or simply worked to death by her express command, while she enjoyed an eccentric and debauched lifestyle. For these characteristics, European history has remembered her reign as that of the Female Caligula.
|
| Customer Reviews:
A bloodthirsty Queen January 23, 2006 L O'connor (richmond, surrey United Kingdom) 6 out of 7 found this review helpful
Admirers of George Macdonald Fraser's 'Flashman' saga will already be acquainted with the terrifying Queen Ranavalona of Madgascar, who appears in 'Flashman's lady' If you do not already know of her be warned, her story is not for the squeamish. Ranavalona was one of the wives of King Radama, 'the Malagasay Napoleon'. On his death in 1828 she seized the throne and held onto it for the next 33 years. During her bloody reign at least a third of the population of Madagascar is estimated to have died on her orders, either executed or worked to death as forced labour. Criminals, traitors (real or imaginary) and anyone she happened to take a dislike to, were put to death by gruesome means. She had a particular loathing for Christians, who were persecuted with great savagery. Despite her hatred of foreign influence, she formed a surprising alliance with a young French merchant, Jean Laborde, who was shipwrecked on the west coast of Madagascar in 1831. She found she could make use of him to manufacture cannon, muskets and gunpowder, and he appears to have been useful to her in other ways too, since he was rumoured to be the father of her only son. Despite her hatred of foreigners, she was fascinated by all things Euroepan, and she and her courtiers dressed in a bizarre mixture of French fashions of various periods. She discovered a passion for fale flowers, which Laborde manufactured for her, and which she and her ladies wore in such quantities that one account described them as 'floral porcupines'. Despite all her cruelties and excesses, she seems to have been able to inspire great awe and reverence in her subjects, one of the lavish ceremonies she performed was the Queen's Bath, which she took in public, afterwards sprinking the adoring crowds with her used bath water, a great honour. A coup engineered against her in 1857 involved Laborde and other foreigners, including the indomitable lady traveller Ida Pfeiffer, who was visiting the island at the time and was drawn into the conspiracy. The coup was a failure, but the foreigners escaped with their lives, being banished from the island. It is evident that, in spite of her great cruelty and brutality, Keith Laidler does not altogether disapprove of Queen Ranavalona. He writes of her: Unlike many other African and Asian kingdoms, while Ranavalona held power Madgascar had successfully defied all attempts at colonisation. The island had remained an independent state despite the best efforts of both Britain, and, especially, France, to bring it under European sway. For all her manifold faults, the Female Caligula had fulfilled the sacred promise she had made more than three decades before, standing proudly on the sacred coronation stone as the young and beautiful Queen of Imerina: "Never say 'she is only a feeble and ignorant woman, how can she rule such a vast empire.' I will rule here, to the good fortune of my people and the glory of my name! I will worship no gods but those of my ancestors. the ocean shall be the boundary of my realm and I will not cede the thickness of one hair of my realm!" Whether it was really to the 'good fortune' of her people is doubtful, presumably the third or more of the population who perished on her orders might think not, but nevertheless it is true that she held onto her kingdom, and as Mr Laidler says "she had extended her domains and, against the colonial current of the times, had kept the island free from foreign influence". This all came to an end with her death, within anothe thirty years Madgascar was a French colony. This is a fascinating story about an appalling but intriguing woman.
Eurocentric and Misleadingly Exaggerated Sensationalism July 28, 2007 C. Antal (Seattle, USA) 2 out of 3 found this review helpful
This might make for an entertaining read but please don't allow yourself to believe the author's claim that the tale he tells is entirely true. By selective inclusion of information, mainly stemming from 19th century Europeans (or locals favorable to them), Laidler has cobbled together an incredibly skewed and sensationalistic book that does an excellent job of reviving the hackneyed "Western civilization" vs "Savage" stereotype. Bravo. Ranavalona's methods were extreme but she reigned in a time of unprecedentedly threatening change, in a land where the preservation of traditions is central to the spirituality and identity of the entire nation. There are plenty of scholars of Madagascar who have interpreted her actions as those of a leader doing what she felt was her duty to protect the nation from spiritual, mental and political domination, and given that the nation was subsequently colonized by France after her reign had ended, she obviously wasn't imagining the danger. In this light, her relationship with Laborde makes a lot more sense. Disappointing.
A biased author on Queen Ravalona September 23, 2007 Mwanya (USA) 1 out of 1 found this review helpful
The author has given himself a luxury of attacking African and Asian cultures by ridiculing and demonizing their ancient rulers. History writing has no formulas like in science for this author to make us believe everything he is saying. There is absolutely an involvement of his beliefs and what he likes. This kind of arrogance can lead to what happened to a movie maker in Netherlands after he attacked the Arab culture. Queen Ranavalona has done what any other ruler would do when besieged by foreign cultural and economical invasion. In addition to the African Queen Caligula he also wrote a book about a Chinese Caligula. It seems to me that he is unhappy with people who have resisted European evangelization. Maybe he needs to write another book with the title of a Japanese Caligula because of the following: In 1596, it became clear to the Japanese authorities that Christianization had been a prelude to Spanish conquest of other lands; and it quickly dawned on them that a fifth column loyal to Rome and controlled by the priests of a foreign religion was a clear and present danger to the sovereignty of a newly unified Japan. Soon after, the persecution and suppression of Japanese Christians began. Early in the 17th century, sensing the danger from a creed that taught obedience to foreign priests rather than the Japanese authorities, all missionaries were ordered to leave and all Japanese were ordered to register at the Buddhist temples. When Japanese Christians took part in a rebellion, foreign priests were executed, the Spanish were expelled and Japanese Christians were forbidden to travel abroad. After another rebellion, largely by Christians, was put down, the Japanese Christians were suppressed and their descendants were put under close state surveillance for centuries thereafter. In the 1640s all Japanese suspected of being Christians were ruthlessly exterminated. Thus did Japan, by 1650, save itself from the first European attempt to mentally subvert, conquer and colonize it.
Wild story - reality beats fantasy June 6, 2007 Reluctant Badger 0 out of 1 found this review helpful
Ranavalona is a character that needs to be understood and appreciated in our modern world. She is an example of what the friction between a world of aboriginal tribal life and our "civilized" society can produce. And the story is just wild. She is a character that is so out of this world that nobody would come up with her in a fictional novel. One hell of a read.
|
|
|
|
| |
|