Home

Zumbi

Zumbi, commonly known as Zumbi dos Palmares, was a 17th‑century Brazilian leader of the Quilombo dos Palmares, the most populous and durable of the fugitive slave communities (quilombos) in colonial Brazil. Born around 1655 in Palmares, his birth name is not clearly recorded; he adopted the name Zumbi early in life. Palmares was located in the area of Serra da Barriga, in what is now the state of Alagoas, and at times housed tens of thousands of escaped enslaved Africans, Indigenous people, and free Brazilians who banded together to resist colonial slavery.

After the death of Ganga Zumba, who had led Palmares in earlier years, Zumbi became the paramount

Zumbi died during the 1695 siege of Palmares, when Portuguese forces led by Domingos Jorge Velho attacked

Today, Zumbi is remembered as a prominent symbol of Afro-Brazilian resistance to slavery and oppression. November

leader
around
1678.
He
continued
the
community’s
resistance
against
Portuguese
incursions
and
slave
raids,
successfully
defending
Palmares
for
many
years
and
maintaining
a
network
of
villages
and
alliances
that
helped
preserve
the
settlement’s
independence.
the
settlement
at
Serra
da
Barriga.
Sources
differ
on
the
exact
circumstances,
but
most
agree
that
he
was
killed
during
the
assault,
and
his
death
became
a
symbol
of
the
end
of
Palmares
as
an
organized,
independent
free
state.
His
head
is
reputedly
said
to
have
been
displayed
in
Recife,
though
details
vary
by
account.
20,
the
date
of
his
death,
is
observed
in
Brazil
as
Black
Awareness
Day
(Dia
da
Consciência
Negra).
The
Palmares
legacy
and
Zumbi’s
memory
are
widely
discussed
in
Brazilian
history
as
part
of
the
broader
narrative
of
resistance
to
slavery
and
colonialism.