Correct me if I'm wrong, but those are all "common" variety figs that don't produce viable seeds due to lack of pollination from a fig wasp and a male tree. They just produce sterile, tasty fruit with bunk seeds.
Those that aren't "common" varieties that are pollinated are rare, region-specific, and don't grow true to type since male trees are involved.
I believe they can only be propagated from cuttings, air layers, or tissue culture. Tissue culture would get you closest to a "seedling" type growth and are free of any fig virus that can inhibit vigor. Rooting cuttings is the gold standard though, and you can get them on
www.figbid.com.