Msiri (born, near Tabora, Tanganyika—died Dec. 20, 1891, Katanga, Congo Free State) was an African ruler, one of the most successful of the 19th-century immigrant adventurers and state builders in Central Africa.
About 1856 Msiri settled in southern Katanga with a few Nyamwezi followers, and by about 1870 he had succeeded in taking over most of this valuable copper region from its previous Lunda rulers. During the height of his power in the mid-1880s Msiri not only ruled directly a very large kingdom but also received tribute from neighbouring areas. His prosperity was largely based on the copper trade, though he dealt in slaves and ivory as well; thus his basic policy was to keep trade routes open toward both the east and west coasts. In the 1870s he began to trade with the Arab trader and state builder Tippu Tib. Msiri was especially interested in buying rifles, which he saw as absolutely necessary to his military strength.
Missionaries first entered Msiri’s kingdom in 1886. Of greater consequence, however, was the realization by other Europeans that Katanga was rich in minerals. Msiri refused to negotiate with the British South Africa Company, but in 1891 more importunate expeditions arrived from the Belgian king Leopold II’s Congo Free State. One tried to encourage rebellion against Msiri, who was fatally shot while negotiating with another expedition.
Though Msiri adopted older patterns of indigenous Lunda state building, he also introduced new political titles and ceremonies and made some changes in customary law. Of at least equal importance was the introduction by the Nyamwezi into Katanga of the sweet potato, smallpox vaccination, and a technique for making copper wire.