Queen Nzinga of Ndongo and Matamba fought against Portuguese slave traders in the 17th century by forming alliances with other African nations and resisting Portuguese colonization. She also utilized diplomacy and military tactics to combat the slave trade, including establishing a network to free and protect enslaved Africans.
Franck Ndongo was born in 1988.
Atanasio Ndongo Miyone died in 1969.
Donato Ndongo-Bidyogo was born in 1950.
Jean-Maxime Ndongo was born in 1992.
Martin Ndongo-Ebanga was born on 1966-03-23.
Nzinga Mbena, also known as Queen Nzinga, was a 17th-century queen of the Ndongo and Matamba kingdoms in present-day Angola. She is renowned for her resistance against Portuguese colonization and her efforts to unify various African tribes against European invaders. Nzinga is celebrated as a symbol of strength and resilience in the fight for independence and sovereignty in Africa.
A. M. Ndongo has written: 'South Africa in Africa' -- subject(s): Bibliography, Foreign relations
Donato Ndongo-Bidyogo has written: 'Shadows of your black memory' -- subject(s): Fiction, Religion and culture, Young men, Africans
She was the queen of Ndongo and matamba here is the link to her biography http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nzinga_of_Ndongo_and_Matamba
She was born in Ndongo now called Angola
The name "Angola" is believed to have originated from the title used by the rulers of the Ndongo kingdom in the 16th century. When the Portuguese colonized the area in the 15th century, they adopted the name "Angola" to refer to the region. The precise meaning or origin of the word is not definitively known.