$ 48.00
Zulu Warrior Attacking with Knobkerrie, 1879
The knobkerrie, or iwisa club, was a significant weapon to the Zulu warrior and as simple as it seems, it required extra practice and strength to wield effectively. The club is, after all, an uncomplicated weapon, a stick with a weighted head. But to drop a crushing strike requires more moving parts than an outside observer would think. To deliver a deathblow the attacker would draw back the weapon with a deliberate speed, unhurried and smooth, fully extending his arm and opening up the body. On the downstroke he would step into the swing, using the lower body to generate power. He maintains a constant balance and seamlessly lands the knobkerrie’s head on the intended target. No small feat in the hurly-burly of battle.
1/30 scale
Matte Finish
Single figure in box
$ 56.00
NEW! IN STOCK! "A Gentleman Listens", Gentleman Standing with Chair, 1770-85 This gentleman wears the most recent fashion of the last quarter of the 18th century, including a fine hat cocked...
Sold Out - $ 275.00
Four WAAF personnel and a male RAF sergeant stand alongside a large wooden heptagonal table on which is displayed a sectional map of southeast England and part of northern France and Belgium.Each of the...
$ 47.00
Another important member of many HUEY flight crews were the "Door Gunners", and most 'HUEYS' had two door gunners. They would fly approximately four to five missions weekly with much of their work...
$ 50.00
NEW! IN STOCK! French Royal Deux-Ponts Standing Make Ready By the middle of the 18th century most military drill manuals followed 12 to 13 steps to “load by the numbers.” The...