-
Rasoherina (1814 – 1
April 1868) (also
Rasoherina-Manjaka) was
Queen of
Madagascar from 1863 to 1868,
succeeding her
husband Radama II
following his presumed...
- July 1883) was
Queen of
Madagascar from 1868 to 1883,
succeeding Queen Rasoherina, her
first cousin.[citation needed] She is best
remembered for Christianizing...
-
strangled on May 12, 1863. His wife Rabodo, who took the
throne name
Rasoherina, was
allowed by the
ministers to
succeed her
husband on the condition...
- cross-shaped
wooden house (Manampisoa)
built as the
private residence of
Queen Rasoherina, a
stone Protestant chapel (Fiangonana), nine
royal tombs, and a number...
-
between the
sovereign and the
prime minister.
Rainilaiarivony and
Queen Rasoherina worked together to
depose Rainivoninahitriniony for his
abuses of office...
-
under the
throne name of
Rasoherina,
reigned until her
death on 1
April 1868. The
Malagasy people remember Queen Rasoherina for
sending amb****adors to...
- coup
meant to
enable him to
regain his
position upon the
death of
Queen Rasoherina ended in failure. Born in 1824,
Rainivoninahitriniony was
known in childhood...
- the monarch.
Following the coup, the
courtiers offered Radama's queen,
Rasoherina, the
opportunity to rule, if she
would accept a power-sharing arrangement...
- (aged 33) 16
August 1861 12 May 1863 (murdered) Son of
Ranavalona I
Merina Rasoherina 1814 – 1
April 1868 (aged 54) 12 May 1863 1
April 1868 Wife of Radama...
-
shipped to Madagascar,
where they were
placed within the tomb of
Queen Rasoherina on the
grounds of the Rova of Antananarivo.
Ranavalona III,
daughter of...