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Page "History of Madagascar" ¶ 70
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Rasoherina and married
Subsequent monarchs were controlled by influential Hova, particularly Rainilaiarivony, who became Prime Minister after his brother and successively married all three remaining queens of the monarchy: Rasoherina, Ranavalona II and Ranavalona III.

Rasoherina and her
Rabodo, crowned queen on May 13, 1863 under the throne name of Rasoherina, reigned until her death on April 1, 1868.
His wife Rabodo, who took the throne name Rasoherina, was allowed by the ministers to succeed her husband on the condition that she and future sovereigns would no longer rule unilaterally, but rather in concert with the Hova ( the class of free citizens ) as represented by the position of Prime Minister.
King Radama II walks with his wife Rabodo, who would become Queen Rasoherina after the coup against her husband.
Rasoherina ( 1814 – 1 April 1868 ) ( also Rasoaherina ) was Queen of Madagascar from 1863 to 1868, succeeding her husband Radama II following his presumed assassination.
Rasoherina acted as queen consort for only two years before her husband's political decisions succeeded in displeasing his ministers to such an extent that a coup was organized in which Radama II was believed assassinated.
The body of Queen Rasoherina was interred in her tomb at the Rova of Antananarivo.
At five in the evening, Rasoherina delivered a public address, asking those favorable to her rule to walk with her through the capital ; a massive crowd paraded with her through the city, demonstrating their support for her continued authority.

Rasoherina and Prime
Following the coup, the courtiers offered Radama's queen Rasoherina ( 1863 – 68 ) the opportunity to rule, if she would accept a power sharing arrangement with the Prime Minister — a new social contract that would be sealed by a political marriage between them.
Queen Rasoherina accepted, first wedding Rainivoninahitriniony, then later deposing him and wedding his brother, Prime Minister Rainilaiarivony ( 1864 – 95 ), who would go on to marry Queen Ranavalona II ( 1868 – 83 ) and Queen Ranavalona III ( 1883 – 97 ) in succession.
The United States and the Kingdom of Madagascar concluded a commercial convention in 1867 after which Queen Rasoherina and Prime Minister Rainilaiarivoy exchanged gifts with president Andrew Johnson.
The Prime Minister entered into a political marriage with Rasoherina a few weeks after the crowning.
The rebel group successfully captured a number of key figures, including the head of the Queen's Guard ; a group of guards, however, managed to escape and raced to notify Prime Minister Rainilaiarivony who was visiting Ambohimanga where Queen Rasoherina was gravely ill from dysentery.

Rasoherina and Rainivoninahitriniony
However, Rainivoninahitriniony became increasingly despotic and exhibited habitual drunkenness and frequent violence as his power grew, reportedly threatening Queen Rasoherina at knife point on several occasions.
One year after taking the throne, Rasoherina deposed Rainivoninahitriniony, appointed his younger brother Rainilaiarivony as prime minister in his stead and contracted a political marriage with him in turn.

Rasoherina and Radama
The next morning, it was publicly announced in the marketplace that Radama had taken his own life due to grief over the deaths of his compatriots the menamaso and that Rabodo would succeed him as Queen Rasoherina.

Rasoherina and .
The Malagasy people remember Queen Rasoherina for sending ambassadors to London and Paris and for prohibiting Sunday markets.
Rabodo was crowned on May 13, 1863 under the throne name of Rasoherina.
Malagasy Ambassadors to Europe, 1863 During the reign of Queen Rasoherina, ambassadors were sent to London and Paris and Sunday markets were prohibited.
On Friday, March 27, 1868, at two in the afternoon, a massive crowd armed with guns and swords attempted to storm the Rova of Antananarivo, residence of Queen Rasoherina.

married and her
If he had married her, he'd have been asking for trouble.
True, she was my Aunt, married to an Uncle related to me only by marriage, but why she had married a man twice her age, and more, perhaps, I did not know or much care.
When Nan Patterson, a stunning and money-minded chorus girl who had appeared in a Floradora road show, rode down Broadway in a hansom cab with her married lover, Frank Young, she stopped the cab to disclose that Young had been shot dead, tearfully insisting that he had shot himself although experts said he could not have done so.
Ann Catt was a lonely, devoted soul, never married, conducting a spotless home and devoted to her church, but a perpetual dissenter and born critic.
Such understanding helps to explain why one matron celebrating thirty-five years of married life could declare with some pride that her husband had `` never seen her entirely naked '', while another woman, boasting an equal number of years of married life, is proud of having `` shared the nudist way of life -- the really free, natural nude life -- for most of that period ''.
The morning he walked in to announce to her, blushing, that he was married.
Romantic news concerns Mrs. Joan Monroe Armour and F. Lee H. Wendell, who are to be married at 4:30 p.m. tomorrow in the Lake Forest home of her brother, J. Hampton Monroe, and Mrs. Monroe.
Miss Kizzie had been right snippy ever since they were married, though you'd have thought a namesake would have brought her round.
It seemed to Lucy that all their married life, she and Jim had been doing nothing but rescue his sister from the constant crises that were her way of life.
Her friends and professional associates would sympathize with her, not because she had lost a beloved husband, but because she had been married to a man who thought unrealistically.
He met Mira Edgerly, a painter of portraits on ivory, shortly after the Armistice, and married her in January, 1919.
She and her second husband, Sir Max Mallowan, were one of the rare married couples to be titled, each in their own right.
Because of her beauty, other gods feared that jealousy would interrupt the peace among them and lead to war, and so Zeus married her to Hephaestus, who was not viewed as a threat.
Though she is one of the few gods of the Greek Pantheon to be actually married, she is frequently unfaithful to her husband.
He married her off to Hephaestus, the dour, humorless god of smithing.
Hephaestus was overjoyed at being married to the goddess of beauty and forged her beautiful jewelry, including the cestus, a girdle that made her even more irresistible to men.
Mackenzie married Helen Neil ( 1826 – 1852 ) in 1845 and with her had three children, with only one girl surviving infancy.
It was a provocative and controversial road comedy about two sexually obsessed teenagers who take an extended road trip with an attractive married woman in her late twenties.
* Annia Galeria Faustina Minor or Faustina the Younger ( between 125 – 130 – 175 ), a future Roman Empress, married her maternal cousin, future Roman Emperor Marcus Aurelius in 146.

married and Prime
Norman Spector called, in The Globe and Mail, for Prime Minister Stephen Harper to address the issue of the act's bar on Catholics, saying that Phillips ' marriage to Kelly would be the first time the provisions of the act would bear directly on Canada – Phillips would be barred from acceding to the Canadian throne because he married a Roman Catholic Canadian.
His aunt was married to NP Prime Minister J. G. Strijdom.
Stephen is married to Helle Thorning-Schmidt, Prime Minister of Denmark and leader of the Danish Social Democrats political party.
* William Pitt the Younger ( 1759 – 1806 ), who also served as Prime Minister ; never married.
She then married his brother, Rainilaiarivony, head of the army at the time of Radama II's murder who was promoted to the post of Prime Minister upon the resignation and exile of his older brother.
He was also one of only four British Prime Ministers never to have married.
Lady Dorothy Cavendish, daughter of the fourth Duke, married Prime Minister William Cavendish-Bentinck, 3rd Duke of Portland ( who assumed the additional surname of Cavendish ) and was an ancestor of Queen Elizabeth II.
The castle ( along with other Boyle properties-Chiswick House, Burlington House, Bolton Abbey and Londesborough Hall ) was acquired by the Cavendish family in 1753 when the daughter and heiress of the 4th Earl of Cork, Lady Charlotte Boyle ( 1731-1754 ) married William Cavendish, 4th Duke of Devonshire, a future Prime Minister of Great Britain & Ireland.
In 1940, whilst he was a lecturer at University College, future British Prime Minister Harold Wilson married Mary Baldwin in this chapel, although he was not a member of the college.
Elisabeth and Philip married on 24 December 1714 ; she quickly proved a domineering consort, and influenced King Philip to make Cardinal Giulio Alberoni the Prime Minister of Spain in 1715.
* In the Yes, Prime Minister episode ' The Patron of the Arts ', two of Sheridan's plays are named as ones the prime minister could not see: ' The Rivals ', " there were too many cabinet ministers after his job ", and ' The School for Scandal ', " well, not after the education secretary had been found in bed with a married primary school headmistress ".
In 1889, Bethmann Hollweg married Martha von Pfuel, niece of Ernst von Pfuel, Prime Minister of Prussia.
This was followed by roles opposite Clive Brook in Freedom Radio, John Gielgud in The Prime Minister and Michael Redgrave in Kipps ( all 1941 ), directed by Carol Reed to whom she was later briefly married.
( Another MacDonald sister married the artist Sir Edward Poynter, a further sister married the ironmaster Alfred Baldwin and was the mother of the Prime Minister Stanley Baldwin, and yet another sister was the mother of Rudyard Kipling.
The third Viscount Palmerston married the Honourable Emily Lamb, sister of Prime Minister Lord Melbourne and widow of Peter Clavering-Cowper, 5th Earl Cowper.
Cavendish – who was married to Lucy Cavendish the niece of British Prime Minister William Ewart Gladstone, and had worked as Gladstone's personal secretary – had only arrived in Ireland the day he was murdered.
In 1868, Joseph married Harriet's cousin, Florence, and had further children, the oldest of whom, Neville, would become Prime Minister in the year of Austen's death.
The Duke's sister Lady Dorothy was married to Prime Minister Harold Macmillan.
He was a minister in the government of Prime Minister Harold Macmillan ( who was married to his aunt ), but is best known for opening Chatsworth House to the public.
Lord Selborne married Lady Maud Cecil, elder daughter of future Prime Minister Robert Cecil, 3rd Marquess of Salisbury, in 1883.
She is married to the former Prime Minister of the United Kingdom, Tony Blair ; the couple have three sons and one daughter.
He married Lady Hester Pitt ( 19 October 1755 — 20 July 1780 ), daughter of Pitt the Elder, Prime Minister and 1st Earl of Chatham on 19 December 1774.

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