Nubia (DC Comics)

Nubia
Nubia on the cover of Nubia & the Amazons #1 (October 2021), art by Alitha Martinez and Laura Martin.
Publication information
PublisherDC Comics
First appearanceWonder Woman #204 (January 1973)
Created byRobert Kanigher (writer), Don Heck (artist)
In-story information
SpeciesAmazon
Team affiliationsJustice League
Abilities
  • Super strength, speed, agility, reflexes, senses, stamina, durability, and endurance
  • Superior hand-to-hand combatant
  • Magical weaponry, including a magical sword and armor
  • Paralyzing "Cold Sight"
  • Possesses the ability to open dimensional portals via lion armor
  • Possesses the ability to relieve her body of physical injury and toxins by becoming one with the Earth's soil and then reforming her body whole again
  • Immortality

Nubia is a fictional character appearing in DC Comics publications and related media, commonly as an ally of Wonder Woman. Historically, she is DC Comics' first black female superhero. Originally introduced in 1973 as Diana's long-lost black fraternal twin sister, today the character is depicted as one of Wonder Woman's oldest and closest friends. Created by Robert Kanigher and Don Heck, Nubia debuted in 1973's Wonder Woman #204 and appeared intermittently throughout Wonder Woman's Bronze Age adventures.[1]

In modern comic stories, Nubia is depicted as an Amazon contemporary of Wonder Woman and the successor to Wonder Woman's mother Hippolyta as queen of the Amazon nation of Themyscira. Raised alongside each other, she and Diana regard each other as "sisters". In stories from 1973-79, she was depicted as Wonder Woman's long-lost twin sister and rival, under the influence of Ares. After long absence from comic books during which time DC rebooted its continuity, she was reimagined as "Nu'Bia" in 1999 by Doselle Young and Brian Denham in Wonder Woman (vol. 2) Annual #8; in this telling, she was the Amazons' champion immediately prior to Diana, assigned to protect the Themyscira by watching over "Doom's Doorway". In the 2000s, several alternative universe versions of Nubia were also prominently featured as Wonder Woman on other parallel worlds, most notably on Earth-23.

In the 2020s, Nubia has developed an expanded profile and greater visibility in DC Comics' post-Rebirth continuity, beginning with a story showing her as a future Wonder Woman following Diana in Future State (2021). She was then heavily featured across DC's Infinite Frontier Wonder Woman publications, including the limited series Nubia & the Amazons (2021), Trial of the Amazons (2022) and Nubia: Queen of the Amazons (2022). The publisher also commissioned young adult graphic novels featuring Nubia as the central character, including Nubia: Real One (2021) and Diana & Nubia: Princesses of the Amazons (2022).

The distinction of DC's first black woman superhero is also sometimes accorded to the Teen Titan Bumblebee, who debuted in 1976, three years after Nubia's first appearance.[2]

  1. ^ Jimenez, Phil. The Essential Wonder Woman Encyclopedia, Del Rey Books, 2010, p. 299-300
  2. ^ Teen Titans (vol. 1) #45, DC Comics, December 1976.