List of rulers of Kongo
This is a list of the rulers of the Kingdom of Kongo known commonly as the Manikongos. Mwene in Kikongo meant a person holding authority, particularly judicial authority, derived from the root -wene which meant, by the sixteenth century at least, territory over which jurisdiction was held. The ruler of Kongo was the most powerful mwene in the region who the Portuguese regarded as the king (in Kikongo ntinu king upon their arrival in 1483.
Kandas, Gerações and Houses
The kingdom of Kongo had a formal state apparatus, in which most positions were in the hands of the king, and the king himself was elected by powerful officials. Kings sought and held office with the assistance of a kanda. Each kanda was a faction which organized people according to a common goal, often but not always rooted in a kin-based relationship. Kandas generally took the name of a person, but could also take the name of a location or title such as Mbala ) or birthplace. The Kikongo prefix "ki" is added onto these names to mean "people with something in common". These factions were recorded as gerações or casas in Kongo documents written in Portuguese. Until the mid-seventeenth century, following the Battle of Mbwila, these factions were short lived and fluctuating, but following the battle, factions were much firmer and lasted for generations, particularly the Kimpanzu and Kinlaza. The Quilombo dos Palmares, a Maroon kingdom formed in Northeast Brazil, was founded by princes and nobles who were enslaved and transported to Portuguese Brazil after the battle in Kongo. There, they retained their titles and their lineage survived even after the kingdom itself was destroyed.Dynasties
When the Portuguese arrived in Kongo in 1483, the reigning king represented the Nimi kanda. This kanda was probably descended from Nimi a Nzima, father of the founder of Kongo. Divisions emerged within the kanda during succession disputes, for example, following the death of Afonso I in 1542, his son Pedro I and grandson Diogo I formed two opposed factions, that of Pedro was called the Kibala faction, and the other, whose name is unknown that followed Diogo. Other elections in the sixteenth century probably also involved similar factions, though the details are unknown.King Álvaro I was the first king of the House of Kwilu. This kanda or lineage was named for the birthplace of Álvaro, north of the capital city. The Kwilu reigned until 1614 when Antonio da Silva, Duke of Mbamba intervened to place Bernardo I on the throne, in place of Álvaro II's minor son, who would eventually take office as Álvaro III.
Another kanda, the House of Nsundi, later known as the Kinkanga a Mvika, took control of Kongo in 1622 under Pedro II, and retained it through the reign of his son, Garcia I. Garcia never held power strongly, and the Kimpanzu returned to power under Ambrosio I. Kimpanzu domination ended in 1641 when two brothers Álvaro and Garcia of the new House of Kinlaza overthrew Álvaro V and took power. The members of the Kikanga a Mvika were all killed or absorbed into the Kinlaza by 1657. The Kinlaza dynasty would reign until Kongo's catastrophic civil war following the 1665 Battle of Mbwila, when sporadic and violent alternation followed.
The capital was destroyed in 1678. Its destruction forced the claimants from both sides of the conflict to rule from mountain fortresses. The Kinlaza retreated to Mbula where they founded the capital of Lemba. Earlier another branch of Kinlaza, under the leadership of Garcia III of Kongo founded a settlement at Kibangu. The Kimpanzu based their struggle for the throne at Mbamba Luvota in the south of Soyo. A new faction appeared in the form of the Água Rosada kanda, headquartered at the mountain fortress of Kibangu. This might be considered a new house formed from both the Kinlaza and Kimpanzu, its founders were the children of a Kimpanzu father and a Kinlaza mother. All parties claimed kingship over Kongo, but their power rarely spread outside their fortresses or the immediate surrounding area.
The country was finally reunited by Pedro IV of the Água Rosada kanda. Pedro IV declared a doctrine of shared power by which the throne would shift from Kinlaza to the Kimpanzu and back., while the Água Rosada appear to have continued as neutral in Pedro's fortress of Kibangu.
The system functioned sporadically, with considerable fighting, until 1764 when José I of the Kinlaza faction usurped the throne and thrust the country back into civil war. The Kinlaza enjoyed a short lived second dynasty that ended in 1788. After that, the throne moved through various royal hands until the kingship was extinguished in 1914.
Elections
The selection of kings of Kongo was by a variety of principles, as kings themselves evoked different methods of selection in their letters announcing their succession. Typically the kingdom was said to pass by election, though the electors and the process they used changed over time and according to circumstances. Frequently election seems to have been a combination of elective and hereditary principles.Kings of Kongo
The following section is divided into periods based on kanda or house rulership. Most houses reigned of a distinct period with few if any intervals. This is not the case, however; after the Kongo Civil War. During this period you will note the name of each king's kanda alongside their reign.Pre-colonial rulers
Ancestors of later rulers
- Nimi, Chief
- Mwene Mbata's daughter, Nimi's consort
Awenekongo of the Lukeni kanda
- Lukeni lua Nimi
- Nanga of Kongo
- Nlaza of Kongo
- Nkuwu a Ntinu of Kongo
- João I Nzinga a Nkuwu
- Afonso I Mvemba a Nzinga
- Pedro I Nkanga a Mvemba of the House of Kibala
- Diogo I Nkumbi a Mpudi
- Afonso II Mpemba a Nzinga
- Bernardo I of Kongo
- Henrique I Nerika a Mpudi
Awenekongo of the Kwilu kanda
- Álvaro I Nimi a Lukeni lua Mvemba
- Álvaro II Nimi a Nkanga
- Bernardo II Nimi a Nkanga
- Álvaro III Nimi a Mpanzu
Awenekongo of the Nkanga a Mvika kanda
- Pedro II Nkanga a Mvika
- Garcia I Mvemba a Nkanga
Mwenekongo of the Kwilu kanda
- Ambrósio I Nimi a Nkanga
- Álvaro IV Nzinga a Nkuwu
Awenekongo of the Mpanzu kanda
- Álvaro V Mpanzu a Nimi
Awenekongo of the Nlaza kanda
- Álvaro VI Nimi a Lukeni a Nzenze a Ntumba
- Garcia II Nkanga a Lukeni a Nzenze a Ntumba
- António I Nvita a Nkanga
Awenekongo during the Civil War
- Afonso II of Kongo and Nkondo of the House of Kimpanzu
- Álvaro VII Mpanzu a Mpandu of the House of Kinlaza
- Álvaro VIII Mvemba a Mpanzu of the House of Kimpanzu
- Pedro III Nsimba Ntamba of the House of Kinlaza
- Álvaro IX Mpanzu a Ntivila of the House of Kimpanzu
- Rafael I Nzinga a Nkanga of the House of Kinlaza
- Afonso III Mvemba a Nimi of the House of Kimpanzu
- Daniel I Miala mia Nzimbwila of the House of Kimpanzu
Awenekongo of Kibangu
- Garcia III Nkanga a Mvemba
- André I Mvizi a Nkanga
- Manuel Afonso Nzinga an Elenke of the House of Kimpanzu
- Álvaro X Nimi a Mvemba Agua Rosada of the House of the Agua Rosada
- Pedro IV Afonso Agua Rosada Nusamu a Mvemba of the House of the Agua Rosada
Awenekongo of Lemba (Mbula) for the House of Kinlaza
- Pedro III Nsimba Ntamba
- João Manuel II Nzuzi a Ntamba
Mwenekongo of Mbamba Lovata for the Kimpanzu
- Manuel de Vuzi a Nóbrega
Awenekongo after the Reoccupation of São Salvador
- Pedro IV Nusamu a Mvemba of the House of the Agua Rosada
- Manuel II Mpanzu a Nimi of the House of Kimpanzu
- Garcia IV Nkanga a Mvandu of the House of Kinlaza from Mbula
- Nicolau I Misaki mia Nimi of the House of Kimpanzu
- Afonso IV Nkanga a Nkanga of the House of Kinlaza
- António II Mvita a Mpanzu of the House of Kimpanzu
- Sebastião I Nkanga kia Nkanga of the House of Kinlaza
- Pedro V Ntivila a Nkanga of the House of Kimpanzu
- Álvaro XI Nkanga a Nkanga of the House of Kinlaza from Nkondo
- José I Mpasi a Nkanga of the House of Kinlaza
- Afonso V of Kongo of the House of Kinlaza from Nkondo
- Álvaro XII of Kongo of the House of Kinlaza from Nkondo
- Aleixo I Mpanzu a Mbandu
- Joaquim I of Kongo
- Henrique II Masaki ma Mpanzu
- Garcia V Nkanga a Mvemba
- André II Mvizi a Lukeni
- Henrique III Mpanzu a Nsindi a Nimi a Lukeni
- Álvaro XIII of Kongo, also known as Ndongo,
- Peter V of Kongo, also known as Elelo,
Awenekongo after becoming a vassal of Portugal
- Álvaro XIV of Kongo also known as Agua Rosada
- Henrique IV of Kongo also known as Tekenge
- Pedro VI of Kongo also known as Mbemba
- Manuel Nkomba of Kongo
- Manuel III of Kongo also known as Kiditu
Pretenders to the throne since 1914
- Álvaro XV Afonso of Kongo, also known as Nzinga,
- Pedro VII Afonso of Kongo
- António III Afonso of Kongo
- Isabel Maria da Gama of Kongo
- Pedro VIII Afonso of Kongo, also known as Mansala,
- Isabel Maria da Gama of Kongo
- Interregnum, 1975-2000
- Josè Henrique da Silva Meso Mankala of Kongo : Afonso Mendes,
Brazilian branch of Palmares
- Ganga Zumba, King. A son of Princess Aqualtune, daughter of an unidentified king of Kongo. She was present at the Battle of Mbwila.
- Ganga Zona, King. A brother of Ganga Zumba.
- Zumbi, also known as Francisco, King. A nephew of Ganga Zumba, son of his sister Princess Sabina. Today, a National Hero in Brazil.
- Camuanga, King. A son of Zumbi and the last known member of the lineage in the Americas.