Flag of Madagascar, for article on Madagascar independence

Madagascar declares independence from France, ending six decades of colonial rule

On June 26, 1960 C.E., the red, white, and green flag of a new republic was raised over Antananarivo. After 63 years as a French colony, Madagascar — the vast island nation off the southeastern coast of Africa — became a sovereign state, rejoining a global wave of decolonization that was reshaping the political map of an entire continent.

Key facts about Madagascar independence

  • Madagascar independence: Madagascar officially became the independent Malagasy Republic on June 26, 1960 C.E., following negotiations with France under the framework of the French Community established in 1958 C.E.
  • French colonization: France had annexed Madagascar in 1897 C.E., abolishing the Merina monarchy and suppressing a culture that had sustained a unified kingdom across most of the island for nearly a century.
  • Malagasy sovereignty: The new republic inherited not just borders but one of the world’s most biologically distinctive landmasses — an island whose isolation over 90 million years had produced wildlife found nowhere else on Earth.

A kingdom crushed, a nation reborn

Madagascar’s path to independence runs through one of the most remarkable political histories in the Indian Ocean world. By the early 19th century C.E., the Merina people of the central highlands had unified much of the island into the Kingdom of Madagascar — a sophisticated state with a written language, a diplomatic corps, and trade connections stretching across the ocean.

France ended that kingdom in 1897 C.E., deposing Queen Ranavalona III and exiling her to Algeria. The annexation was not passive. A rebellion in 1947 C.E. — known as the Malagasy Uprising — was suppressed with devastating force. Estimates of the dead range from tens of thousands to over 100,000, though France did not formally acknowledge the scale of the violence for decades. The uprising’s suppression did not extinguish the independence movement — it deepened it.

When France restructured its relationship with its overseas territories through the 1958 C.E. referendum on the French Community, Madagascar voted to remain within the community — but only as a transitional step. By 1960 C.E., full sovereignty had been negotiated peacefully, and Philibert Tsiranana became the country’s first president.

What made Madagascar’s independence distinctive

Madagascar is not simply an African story, though it is very much an African one. The Malagasy people descend from at least two major waves of settlement: Austronesian seafarers from what is now Indonesia, arriving perhaps between 350 B.C.E. and 550 C.E., and Bantu-speaking groups from East Africa who arrived around the ninth century C.E. The result is one of the most genetically and culturally layered populations on Earth — a people shaped by the Indian Ocean’s deep networks of exchange long before European contact.

This complexity meant that the new nation did not emerge from a single ethnic or linguistic identity but from a process of synthesis across 18 or more recognized peoples. The Malagasy language itself — spoken across the entire island — is Austronesian in its roots, a linguistic thread connecting Madagascar to Southeast Asia across thousands of miles of open ocean.

Independence, then, was not only the end of colonialism. It was also the assertion of a society that had, over more than a millennium, built something genuinely its own.

Lasting impact

Madagascar’s independence in 1960 C.E. was part of the Year of Africa — the same year 17 African nations gained sovereignty. The collective weight of those declarations accelerated the unraveling of European colonial empires and reshaped international institutions, including the United Nations, which saw its membership surge with newly independent states pressing for a different kind of global order.

For Madagascar specifically, sovereignty meant control — at least in principle — over one of the planet’s most extraordinary natural endowments. More than 90% of Madagascar’s wildlife is endemic, found nowhere else on Earth. The island has since become a focal point for global conservation efforts, with ecotourism and biodiversity research representing potential foundations for sustainable development.

Independence also restored the cultural dignity of a people whose monarchy, written traditions, and ceremonial life had been systematically suppressed under colonial rule. The famadihana — the Malagasy ceremony of turning the bones of ancestors — and the reverence for the tompontany, the original masters of the land, are practices that colonialism tried and failed to erase.

On the continental level, Madagascar’s membership in the African Union and the Southern African Development Community reflects its integration into a broader project of African cooperation — a project that 1960 C.E. made structurally possible for dozens of nations at once.

Blindspots and limits

Independence did not resolve the inequalities French colonialism had entrenched. As of 2021 C.E., 68.4% of Madagascar’s population was classified as multidimensionally poor, and the country remains on the United Nations’ list of least-developed nations. Income disparities have widened rather than narrowed since the early 2000s C.E., and political instability — including military coups in 2009 C.E. and again in 2025 C.E. — has repeatedly interrupted the democratic governance that independence was meant to secure.

The 1947 C.E. uprising and its suppression remain incompletely reckoned with. France’s formal acknowledgment of that violence has been partial and slow, and many Malagasy families have never received a full accounting of what was lost.

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For more on this story, see: Wikipedia — Madagascar: Independent state

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