AMBOSITRA

We spent a day in Madagascar’s central highlands, in the historic heartland of the Betsileo people and a town often called the “Capital of Woodworking” for its renowned Zafimaniry art. Ambositra is a high-altitude city (1,342โ€“1,422 m elevation) serving as the capital of the Amoron’i Mania region, characterised by temperate weather, rolling hills, terraced rice fields, and eucalyptus forests.

Ambositra, long a strategic crossroads and trading hub, grew from a collection of 14th-century hamlets and later developed under Merina influence. In the 18th century, the Zafimaniryโ€”a subgroup who settled in the nearby mountainsโ€”refined highly specialised woodworking techniques using local hardwoods. Their craftsmanship was recognised by UNESCO in 2003 as Intangible Cultural Heritage, cementing Ambositra’s reputation as a centre of this unique art form.

During the 19th-century colonial period, the town became an important commercial and administrative hub linking Antananarivo to the southern regions, and today its architecture reflects a blend of European and Malagasy influences.

The surrounding area is also known for its rich cultural traditions, including Famadihana (the reburial of ancestors) and Savika, a traditional bull-taming sportโ€”similar to bullfighting but without harming the animal.