Category
page 1African slave owners
Mansa Musa
14th-century emperor (mansa) of the Mali Empire
Afonso I of Kongo
Ruler of the Kingdom of Kongo from 1509 to 1542/43
Gezo
thumb|The Royal flag of Ghezo
Ghezo, also spelled Gezo, was King of Dahomey (present-day Republic of Benin) from 1818 until 1858. Ghezo replaced his brother Adandozan (who ruled from 1797 to 1818) as king through a coup with the assistance of the Brazilian slave trader Francisco Félix de Sousa. He ruled over the kingdom during a tumultuous period, punctuated by the British blockade of the ports of Dahomey in order to stop the Atlantic slave trade.
Queen Amina
Hausa Muslim Warrior Queen of Zazzau
Muhammadu Bello
Sultan of Sokoto
Efunroye Tinubu
Nigerian aristocrat
Peter I of Kongo
mwene Kongo
Lukeni lua Nimi
King of kongo
Ayuba Suleiman Diallo
Senegalese slave

Abushiri ibn Salim al-Harthi
Al Bashir ibn Salim al-Harthi () (c.1840 - 15 December 1889), was a wealthy merchant and slave-owning plantation owner of Omani Arab and Oromo parentage (from his mother's side) who is known for the Abushiri Revolt against the German East Africa Company in present-day Tanzania. He is credited with uniting local Arab traders and African tribes against German colonialism.
Efunsetan Aniwura
second Iyalode of Ibadan
Ana Joaquina dos Santos e Silva
wealthy Luso-African merchant, moneylender, entrepreneur, and slave trade
Mohamed Trik
ruler of Algiers (d. 1682)
Akinsemoyin
Oba Akinsemoyin reigned as Oba of Lagos from around 1704 to 1749. His father was Oba Ado and his siblings were Erelu Kuti and Oba Gabaro, whom he succeeded.
Akintoye
Akitoye (died 2 September 1853), sometimes wrongly referred to as Akintoye, reigned twice as Oba of Lagos; first, from 1841 to 1845, and a second time, from 1851 to 1853. His father was Oba Ologun Kutere and his siblings were Obas Osinlokun and Adele.
Anne Pépin
Senegalese Signare
Osinlokun
Oba Osinlokun or Eshinlokun (died 1829) reigned as Oba of Lagos from 1821 to 1829. His father was Oba Ologun Kutere and his siblings were Obas Adele and Akitoye, making the Ologun Kutere Obaship line the dominant one in Lagos. Among Osinlokun's children were Idewu Ojulari, Kosoko, and Opo Olu.
Ologun Kutere
slave trader and slave holder
Adele Ajosun
oba of Lagos
Kosoko
Kosoko (died 1872) was a member of the Ologun Kutere Lagos Royal Family who reigned as Oba of Lagos from 1845 to 1851. His father was Oba Osinlokun and his siblings were Idewu Ojulari (who was Oba from 1829 to 1834/35), Olufunmi, Odunsi, Ladega, Ogunbambi, Akinsanya, Ogunjobi, Akimosa, Ibiyemi, Adebajo, Matimoju, Adeniyi, Isiyemi, Igbalu, Oresanya, and Idewu-Ojulari.
Ali Babba bin Bello
Sultan of Sokoto