They include the first black woman to serve in the Royal Navy, who disguised herself as a man called William Brown.
Other people featured are Victorian circus owner Pablo Fanque, who inspired the Beatles song Being for the Benefit of Mr Kite!.
Also featured in the map is composer and poet Cecile Nobrega, who led a 15-year campaign to establish England’s first permanent public monument to black women in Stockwell.
The map was produced by @TfL in partnership with @bcaheritage, a cultural centre in Brixton, south London.
The names of Tube lines have also been renamed to link them by common themes.
The Bakerloo line represents sports stars, like Olympic runner Harry Edward, while the Central line relates to those in the Arts, the Circle line remembers Georgians and the District line honours trailblazers.
The Jubilee line marks LGBTQ+ idols, the Hammersmith and City recognises vanguards, the Metropolitan line medics, the Northern line campaigners, the Piccadilly line performers, the Victoria line literary stars and finally the Waterloo and City line honours cultural heroes.
Modern names on the list include novelist Andrea Levy, comedian Felix Dexter, the Hot Chocolate singer Errol Brown and footballers Laurie Cunningham and Justin Fashanu.
The map also pays tribute to community figures such as Claudia Jones, a political activist who co-founded Notting Hill Carnival, and Paulette Wilson, who fought her own deportation to Jamaica and brought media attention to the human rights violations of the Windrush scandal.
Some stations were renamed after historic inhabitants. Tottenham Hale has been renamed Bernie Grant Centre, after the building in honour of the former Labour MP, while Battersea Power Station is John Archer, the first black mayor in London.
West Brompton has been renamed Ivory Bangle Lady, the name given to the remains of a high-status North African woman from 4th century York.
Her remains were found with jet and ivory bracelets, telling us that that wealthy people from the Roman empire were in the UK at the time.
Mayor @SadiqKhan said: ‘Black history is London’s history and this reimagination of the Tube map celebrates the enormous contribution black people continue to make, to the success of our city.
I’m determined to create a more equal city where black lives truly matter.'
The work honours #BlackHistoryMonth, which happens every October and aims to celebrate the enormous contribution Black Britons have made to UK.
@Arike_Oke said: ‘London’s black history is deeply embedded in its streets and neighbourhoods.
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It’s #NationalComingOutDay, so we’re celebrating the stories of some well-known LGBTQI+ faces and exploring the ways in which they chose to show the world exactly who they are 🏳️🌈🧵
Judge @RobbieRinder chose to come out at the age of 22, in what he describes as a ‘soft process.’ 👨⚖️
‘I was partially motivated by not wanting to live a lie – a need to live honestly – and partially because I had fallen in love, albeit unrequitedly.’
Strictly Come Dancing star @jojo_radebe credits his family in South Africa’s with allowing him to feel comfortable with his identity from an early age 🇿🇦
‘I am grateful they never imposed ideas about sexuality on me and I was allowed to just be a child.’
When the issue of corruption is raised, most people in the UK would probably say things like that don’t really happen here.
After all, the UK is ‘the mother of parliaments’ and one of the world’s most established democracies. Our politics may be messy, but it is not corrupt.
This complacency is not only dangerous, it’s delusional.
It certainly should have been shattered by the revelations in the Pandora Papers, which give a glimpse into the world of tax dodging and money laundering by some of the world’s richest and most powerful people.
Sir Peter Bottomley, the oldest MP in the Commons, has spoken out about his financial struggles.
He thinks MPs, who are paid £81,932, should be paid the same amount as GPs – whose average salary is £100,700.
The average salary across the UK was £31,461 as of last year.
Following calls for health workers to recieve a raise for their work over the pandemic, he told the New Statesman: ‘A general practitioner in politics ought to be paid roughly the same as a general practitioner in medicine.'
The viral photo had people in stitches at the way Ndakasi mimics Mathieu Shamavu, who along with Andre Bauma, rescued her in 2007.
Andre found her clinging her mother's lifeless body after the militia wiped out her family while hunting for bushmeat.
At just 2-months-old, Ndakasi was taken to the Senkwekwe Center in Virunga National Park to live and be rehabilitated with fellow orphaned gorilla Ndeze.