Back
Ginny from One Piece in a close-framed cel-shaded anime scene with a detailed environment
The provided image is an artist's interpretation made for this entry. Details may differ from official depictions. The character and franchise remain © their respective rights holders.

Ginny commanded the East Army of the Revolutionary Army and was the mother of Jewelry Bonney. Born into slavery, she escaped God Valley beside Bartholomew Kuma and Emporio Ivankov, only to be recaptured years later and die from an incurable disease.

Bounty: 190,000,000 (revoked)
Height: 174 cm
Origin: Grand Line (Porco Kingdom)
Status: Deceased
Birthday: October 21st
Blood Type: F
English Va: Emily Neves
Japanese Va: Yumiko Kobayashi
Age At Death: 39
Debut Chapter: Chapter 1095
Debut Episode: Episode 1129
Favorite Food: meat on the bone
Japanese Name: ジニー
Text Size

Appearance

Bangs framing her face, Ginny in childhood kept her pink hair cut short and messy. Freckles dotted her cheeks, a tooth was missing from her smile, and her eyes were purple. Brown shoes, yellow shorts, and a sleeveless top in pink rounded out the look she wore back then.

By adulthood her figure had become slim and curvy at an ordinary height, the hairstyle little changed from childhood aside from being tidier. The local men found her cute and confessed to her often. Her outfit at that stage paired a pale-yellow sleeveless top reading sister with yellow-brown shorts, and her face closely mirrored that of her daughter Jewelry Bonney. Since she had been a slave under the World Nobles both as a child and again later, a slave brand reading Hoof of the Flying Dragon ought to appear somewhere on her, though where it sits is never shown.

Within the Revolutionary Army she switched to a midriff-baring white top, black shorts, red-and-black striped knee socks, and black boots. Her commander attire added pink-and-purple striped trousers, a white shirt, dark-green gloves, red goggles paired with headphones, a backpack, and a band-aid above her left eye. The freckles of her youth had faded by this point.

Text Size

Personality

Even while enslaved, Ginny held onto an upbeat spirit. Food was a weakness of hers, and anyone who picked on her friends earned her hostility. Maturity made her blunt and given to crude language. The townsfolk teased her as a tightwad, yet they loved her all the same.

Mr. Popo Took Your Girl

Featured song

Mr. Popo Took Your Girl

Daddy Jim Headquarters makes R&B, mostly Dragon Ball so far. You should check it out.

Text Size

History

Ginny was born fifty-one years ago in the Grand Line's Porco Kingdom, and the World Nobles enslaved her at the age of four. Nine years on, she was made to enter the Native Hunting Competition at God Valley. Two weeks earlier she had tapped the communications of the Celestial Dragons and learned its two rewards: a pair of Devil Fruits, namely the Nikyu Nikyu no Mi together with the Seiryu-model Uo Uo no Mi. With Emporio Ivankov she broadcast news of the event and its rewards beyond the island, luring in the Rocks Pirates, the Roger Pirates, and the Marines. Amid the chaos that followed, she, Ivankov, Kuma, and roughly 500 captives and natives broke free thanks to Kuma's Devil Fruit.

The three reached the Sorbet Kingdom afterward. Ivankov departed for the sea while Ginny and Kuma settled down together. Kuma later served as a pastor, absorbing the townspeople's pain each Sunday, and Ginny looked after him through it. Her proposal of marriage years later was turned down, Kuma fearing his Buccaneer lineage would endanger her. When he was jailed for defying the Sorbet royal army, she too was imprisoned for demanding his release. The Freedom Fighters then liberated the island, Dragon and Ivankov freed the pair, and and the couple enlisted in the organization that would grow into the Revolutionary Army. By eight years on, Ginny headed the East Army, until she was eventually captured.

Forced to become the eighth wife of a World Noble, Ginny endured Mary Geoise until Jaygarcia Saturn's botched experiment infected her with the Sapphire Scales disease and she was cast out, which freed her. She had given birth to Bonney during this captivity. Carrying her child toward Sorbet, she radioed Kuma, Dragon, and Ivankov a final time, explaining her dwindling lifespan and asking the others to watch over Kuma. Her declaration of love never reached him, as he had already raced off to find her. He arrived too late, learning she had died after natural light triggered her illness. Her grave was set close to the church where the couple had lived, and Kuma swore to raise Bonney as though she were his own. As an accomplished thief, she had once been expert at intercepting and broadcasting Den Den Mushi transmissions, and her bounty of 190,000,000 berries marked her as a genuine threat. She fought with a rifle and, earlier, a wooden stick.

Share this resource

Frequently Asked Questions

Is Ginny Bonney's mother?

Yes, Ginny is the mother of Jewelry Bonney in One Piece. She gave birth to Bonney while imprisoned as the eighth wife of a World Noble at Mary Geoise.

Did Ginny have a baby with a celestial dragon?

Ginny was forced to become the eighth wife of a World Noble at Mary Geoise, and it was during this captivity that she gave birth to her daughter, Jewelry Bonney. This makes a Celestial Dragon Bonney's father.

Is Ginny alive in One Piece?

No, Ginny is deceased in One Piece. After being cast out of Mary Geoise, she died from the incurable Sapphire Scales disease while trying to carry her infant daughter Bonney back to the Sorbet Kingdom.

What illness did Ginny have in One Piece?

Ginny contracted Sapphire Scales, an incurable disease caused by Jaygarcia Saturn's botched experiment during her time as a captive at Mary Geoise. The illness eventually killed her after natural light triggered its effects.

What role did Ginny hold in the Revolutionary Army?

Ginny commanded the East Army of the Revolutionary Army in One Piece, rising to that position roughly eight years before her capture. She joined the organization years earlier alongside Bartholomew Kuma after both escaped slavery at God Valley.

Sources & Information

Looking for more on Ginny? The One Piece Wiki on Fandom has a dedicated page with community notes.

View on Fandom

This content is original writing by Daddy Jim Headquarters based on the One Piece anime series, manga, and official materials. Episode and chapter references are cited where applicable.

Character and scene imagery on this site is original artwork by Daddy Jim Headquarters, not screenshots or licensed imagery. Official cover art is used on three types of pages for editorial commentary:

  • Movie pages: theatrical posters and key visuals, credited to Toei Animation and Toei Company.
  • Game pages: official box art for the One Piece console and mobile games, credited to Bandai Namco.
  • Manga chapter pages: Jump Comics volume covers, credited to Shueisha and Eiichiro Oda.

Help Us Keep This Wiki Accurate

Daddy Jim Headquarters maintains this encyclopedia. If you spot an error, a translation issue, or something that doesn't look right, let us know.