The settlement of Madagascar: what dialects and languages can tell
Maurizio Serva

TL;DR
This study uses new data and methods to confirm Madagascar's initial colonization was a single event on the south-east coast, revealing linguistic relationships among dialects and with Indonesian languages.
Contribution
It introduces an automated lexicostatistic method to analyze Malagasy dialects and their relation to Malay and Maanyan, confirming the landing area and colonization pattern.
Findings
Colonization likely occurred as a single event.
Landing took place on the south-east coast.
Malagasy dialects show close kinship relations.
Abstract
The dialects of Madagascar belong to the Greater Barito East group of the Austronesian family and it is widely accepted that the Island was colonized by Indonesian sailors after a maritime trek which probably took place around 650 CE. The language most closely related to Malagasy dialects is Maanyan but also Malay is strongly related especially for what concerns navigation terms. Since the Maanyan Dayaks live along the Barito river in Kalimantan (Borneo) and they do not possess the necessary skill for long maritime navigation, probably they were brought as subordinates by Malay sailors. In a recent paper we compared 23 different Malagasy dialects in order to determine the time and the landing area of the first colonization. In this research we use new data and new methods to confirm that the landing took place on the south-east coast of the Island. Furthermore, we are able to state…
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