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NEW DELUXE GEORGE WASHINGTON PISTOL,GLOSSY DELUXE FINISH
This new replica flintlock pistol is similar to Item No.1228, but available in a glossy, deluxe finish that enriches the pistols appearance. The stock now has an enhanced luster from a glossy finish and the lock mechanism has the look of a handsome royal blued finish.
Specifications
  • Length: 13.5"
  • Weight: 1.2 lbs
    Price: 89.99


  • Gun Sword or Dagger Hanger Pirate Gray
    This Pirate Style hanger is ideal for swords pistols or rifles of the era and comes in a Gray Gold or Silver finish. Size: 1 3/4 Inches x 1 1/3 Inches x 1 1/2 Inches
    Price: 9.99


    Gun Sword or Dagger Hanger Pirate Gold
    This Pirate Style hanger is ideal for swords pistols or rifles of the era and comes in a Gray Gold or Silver finish. Size: 1 3/4 Inches x 1 1/3 Inches x 1 1/2 Inches
    Price: 9.99


    Gun Sword or Dagger Hanger Pirate Silver Finish
    This Pirate Style hanger is ideal for swords pistols or rifles of the era and comes in a Gray Gold or Silver finish. Size: 1 3/4 Inches x 1 1/3 Inches x 1 1/2 Inches
    Price: 9.99


    15 in. Nepalese Gurkhas Kukri

    The kukri is the renowned national weapon of Nepal and the Gurkhas an elite Nepalese Brigade of the British Army. The kukri is a long curved knife that is deadly in the hands of a Gurkhas. They generally measure between 12 and 18 inches in length and this particular kukri is 15 inches long. The stainless steel blade measures approximately 10 inches long and has a rat-tail tang. Kukri blades always feature a notch called the kaura which is essentially a Hindu religious and phallic symbol.

    The wood handle is nicely polished and has brass accents. This is a finely constructed weapon and has a solid heavy feel. It comes sharpened to a razors edge and has a genuine leather sheath to house it in.
    Price: 13.19



    Mini Pig Face Bascinet Desktop Display

    From our medieval miniatures collection the European Pigface Bascinet is circa 1390. This helm style became popular in the late 13th century widely replacing the Great Helm because of its close fit styling. Towards the late 14th century the long snouted appearance had earned it the English nickname Hounskull or "Pig-faced bascinet". This exceptional helm is skillfully crafted of carbon steel and adorned with brass accents. It measures approximately 5" L x 3" W x 4" H and will make an impressive addition to your collection.

    A black iron desktop display stand is included.
    Price: 24.19



    Mini Roman Infantry Helm Desktop Display

    From our medieval miniatures collection this trusted helmet was used by Roman infanty for protection. The helm features twin "mandibulars" which protect the face.

    The helm has a small decorative visor and several decorative golden studs. The helmet flares out in the rear to increase mobility while still providing protection for the neck. This exceptional helm is skillfully crafted of carbon steel and adorned with brass accents. It measures approximately 4" L x 4" W x 4" H and will make an impressive addition to your collection.

    A black iron desktop display stand is included.
    Price: 24.19



    Mini Crested Roman Officer's Helmet Desktop Display

    From our medieval miniatures collection this Imperial Gallic-Type helmet was the choice of officers who led the mighty roman armies. The flamboyant crest actually served a purpose for the conspicuously practical romans; it made the officer more visible to his men while offering the illusion of height that helped him appear more commanding.

    This exceptional helm is skillfully crafted of carbon steel and is adorned with a fanciful red crest which is removable. The helm measures approximately 4" L x 4" W x 7.5" H (with crest attached) and will make an impressive addition to your collection.

    A black iron desktop display stand is included.
    Price: 24.19



    Mini Knight Burgonet Carbon Steel Desktop Display

    From our medieval miniatures collection this trusted helmet consists of a hinged visor and neck piece. This particular burgonet has a conical shape to it which could deflect sword strikes easily and was a great advance in armor design.

    The helmet splits at the base which allowed its wearer to fit the helmet over one's head. Its dual hinged design made it possible to lift up the visor while still protecting one's neck. This exceptional helm is skillfully crafted of carbon steel with brass accents near the base of the helmet and on the top lateral ridge. It measures approximately 5" L x 4" W x 5" H and will make an impressive addition to your collection.

    A black iron desktop display wire stand is included.
    Price: 24.19



    Mini 16th Century Burgonet Desktop Display

    From our medieval miniatures collection this trusted helmet consists of a peakor visor over the brow and hinged ear-pieces. This particular burgonet has a conical shape to it which could deflect sword strikes easily and was a great advance in armor design.

    The helmet flares out in the rear to increase mobility while still providing protection for the neck. This exceptional helm is skillfully crafted of carbon steel. It measures approximately 4" L x 3.5" W x 4" H and will make an impressive addition to your collection.

    A black iron desktop display stand is included.
    Price: 24.19



    Mini Roman Gladiator Desktop Display

    From our medieval miniatures collection this sturdy helmet was used by gladiators in the Roman Coliseum for protection. The helm features twin "fangs" which create a greusome appearance while protecting the face. A curving spike adorns the top of the helm.

    The helm has a decorative protective visor. The helmet flares out in the rear to increase mobility while still providing protection for the neck. This exceptional helm is skillfully crafted of carbon steel and adorned with brass accents at each point where the visor is fastened to the helm proper. It measures approximately 4.5" L x 3" W x 5.5" H and will make an impressive addition to your collection.

    A black iron desktop display stand is included.
    Price: 24.19



    Mini Great Helm Desktop Display

    From our medieval miniatures collection this battle-ready helm has distinctive golden decorations on the face in the style of the Crusades. This impressive authentic helmet is modeled after Great Helms worn by knights during the middles ages. It makes an impressive display!

    The helm has several decorative golden studs and several breathe holes in the face of the piece. This exceptional helm is skillfully crafted of carbon steel and adorned with brass accents. It measures approximately 4" L x 3" W x 5" H and will make an impressive addition to your collection.

    A black iron desktop display stand is included.
    Price: 24.19



    Mini 15th Century Spanish Barbut Desktop Display

    From our medieval miniatures collection this functional helm is of spanish descent. The barbut has an open-faced design with recognizably long sides whcih come down almost to the shoulders. This particular barbut has an added noseguard for additional protection.

    The helm has several decorative studs. The helmet flares out in the rear to increase mobility while still providing protection for the neck. This exceptional helm is skillfully crafted of carbon steel and adorned with brass accents. It measures approximately 4.5" L x 4" W x 6" H and will make an impressive addition to your collection.

    A black iron desktop display stand is included.
    Price: 24.19



    Mini Anglo-Saxon Helm Desktop Display

    From our medieval miniatures collection this extraordinary helm has been constructed based on the four only surviving examples of Anglo-Saxon helms found in the world! This design dates back to the late 6th century. Twin plates protect the cheeks from harm.

    The helm has a mask in the likes of a face and several decorative golden studs. The helmet flares out in the rear to increase mobility while still providing protection for the neck. This exceptional helm is skillfully crafted of carbon steel and adorned with brass accents. It measures approximately 4" L x 4" W x 6" H and will make an impressive addition to your collection.

    A black iron desktop display stand is included.
    Price: 24.19



    Mini Viking Warrior Helmet Desktop Display

    From our medieval miniatures collection this fantastic helmet is inspired from viking tradition with the signature viking "goggles" which protect the cheekbones nose and brow of its wearer.

    The helm has a small decorative visor and several decorative golden studs. The helmet flares out in the rear to increase mobility while still providing protection for the neck. This exceptional helm is skillfully crafted of carbon steel and adorned with brass accents. It measures approximately 4.5" L x 4" W x 5" H and will make an impressive addition to your collection.

    A black iron desktop display stand is included.
    Price: 24.19



    Mini Viking Horn Helmet Desktop Display

    From our medieval miniatures collection this fantastic helmet is inspired from viking tradition signature viking horns jutting out from each side of the helm with golden brow eye cut-outs and two "mandibular" cheek armor plates.

    The helm has several decorative golden studs. The helmet flares out in the rear to increase mobility while still providing protection for the neck. This exceptional helm is skillfully crafted of carbon steel and adorned with brass accents. It measures approximately 5.5" L x 4" W x 7" H and will make an impressive addition to your collection.

    A black iron desktop display stand is included.
    Price: 24.19



    Mini Viking Golden Eye Helm Desktop Display

    From our medieval miniatures collection this fantastic helmet is inspired from viking tradition with golden brow eye cut-outs and two "mandibular" cheek armor plates.

    The helm has several decorative golden studs. The helmet flares out in the rear to increase mobility while still providing protection for the neck. This exceptional helm is skillfully crafted of carbon steel and adorned with brass accents. It measures approximately 5.5" L x 4" W x 5" H and will make an impressive addition to your collection.

    A black iron desktop display stand is included.
    Price: 24.19



    WOODEN CELTIC SHIELD
    This unique and attractive wooden Celtic shield has a metal hub and wood handle. Diameter: 24" Weight: 6 lbs
    Price: 86.99


     

    War

    War is the reciprocal and violent application of force between hostile political entities aimed at bringing about a desired political end-state via armed conflict. In his seminal work, On War, Carl Von Clausewitz calls war the "continuation of political intercourse, carried on with other means."[1] War is an interaction in which two or more militaries have a “struggle of wills”.[2] When qualified as a civil war, it is a dispute inherent to a given society, and its nature is in the conflict over modes of governance rather than sovereignty. War is not considered to be the same as mere occupation, murder or genocide because of the reciprocal nature of the violent struggle, and the organized nature of the units involved.

    War is also a cultural entity, and its practice is not linked to any single type of political organisation or society. Rather, as discussed by John Keegan in his “History Of Warfare”, war is a universal phenomenon whose form and scope is defined by the society that wages it. [3] The conduct of war extends along a continuum, from the almost universal tribal warfare that began well before recorded human history, to wars between city states, nations, or empires. A group of combatants and their support is called an army on land, a navy at sea, and air force in the air. Wars may be prosecuted simultaneously in one or more different theatres. Within each theatre, there may be one or more consecutive military campaigns. A military campaign includes not only fighting but also intelligence, troop movements, supplies, propaganda, and other components. Continuous conflict is traditionally called a battle, although this terminology is not always fed to conflicts involving aircraft, missiles or bombs alone, in the absence of ground troops or naval forces.

    War is not limited to the human species, as ants engage in massive intra-species conflicts which might be termed warfare. It is theorized that other species also engage in similar behavior, although this is not well documented. [4][5][6]

    Contents

    [hide]

    [edit] History of war

    Main article: History of war

    Some believe war has always been with us; others stress the lack of clear evidence that war is not in our prehistoric past, and the fact that many peaceful, non-military societies have and still do exist.


    Originally, war likely consisted of small-scale raiding. Since the rise of the state some 5000 years ago, military activity has occurred over much of the globe. The advent of gunpowder and the acceleration of technological advances led to modern warfare.

    Since the close of the Vietnam War, the ideas expounded by the Prussian military theorist Carl von Clausewitz (1780-1831) have come to thoroughly permeate American military writing, doctrinal, theoretical, and historical. His book On War, first published (as Vom Kriege) in 1832, was adopted as a key text at the Naval War College in 1976, the Air War College in 1978, the Army War College in 1981. It has always been central at the U.S. Army's School for Advanced Military Studies at Leavenworth (founded in 1983). The U.S. Marine Corps's brilliant little philosophical field manual FMFM 1: Warfighting (1989) is essentially a distillation of On War, and the newer Marine Corps Doctrinal Publications (MCDPs, c.1997) are equally reflective of Clausewitz's basic concepts.*1

    This is not the first time Clausewitz has been in fashion. Indeed, On War has been the bible of many thoughtful soldiers ever since Field Marshal Helmuth von Moltke attributed to its guidance his stunning victories in the wars of German unification (1864, 1866, 1870-71). Nor is it the first time that individual American soldiers and military thinkers have been attracted by his ideas: George Patton, Albert Wedemeyer, and—especially—Dwight Eisenhower were intensely interested in what he had to say.

    It is, however, the first time that the American armed forces as institutions have turned to Clausewitz. While the philosopher had insisted that war was "simply the expression of politics by other means," the traditional attitude of American soldiers had been that "politics and strategy are radically and fundamentally things apart. Strategy begins where politics end. All that soldiers ask is that once the policy is settled, strategy and command shall be regarded as being in a sphere apart from politics."*2 The sudden acceptability of Clausewitz in the wake of Vietnam is not difficult to account for, for among the major military theorists only Clausewitz seriously struggled with the sort of dilemma that American military leaders faced in the aftermath of their defeat. Clearly, in what had come to be called in scathing terms a "political war," the political and military components of the American war effort had come unstuck. It ran against the grain of America's military men to criticize elected civilian leaders, but it was just as difficult to take the blame upon themselves. Clausewitz's analysis could not have been more relevant:

    The more powerful and inspiring the motives for war,... the more closely will the military aims and the political objects of war coincide, and the more military and less political will war appear to be. On the other hand, the less intense the motives, the less will the military element's natural tendency to violence coincide with political directives. As a result, war will be driven further from its natural course, the political object will be more and more at variance with the aim of ideal war, and the conflict will seem increasingly political in character.*3

    When people talk, as they often do, about harmful political influence on the management of war, they are not really saying what they mean. Their quarrel should be with the policy itself, not with its influence.

    Vom Kriege (IPA[fɔm ˈkʁiːgə]) is a book on war and military strategy by Prussian general Carl von Clausewitz, written mostly after the Napoleonic wars, between 1816 and 1830, and published posthumously by his wife in 1832. It has been translated into English several times as On War. On War is actually an unfinished work; Clausewitz had set about revising his accumulated manuscripts in 1827, but did not live to finish the task. His wife eventually compiled all the work and the final two chapters Clausewitz never finished.

    On War is one of the first books on modern military strategy. This is mainly due to Clausewitz' integration of politics and social and economic issues as some of the most important factors in deciding the outcomes of a war. It is one of the most important treatises on strategy ever written, and is prescribed at various military academies to this day.

    Contents

    [hide]

    [edit] History

    Carl von Clausewitz was a Prussian officer among those baffled by how the armies of the French Revolution and Napoleon had changed the nature of war through their ability to motivate the populace and thus unleash war on a greater scale than had previously been the case in Europe. Clausewitz was well educated and had a strong interest in art, science, and education, but he was a professional soldier who spent a considerable part of his life fighting against Napoleon. There is no doubt that the insights he gained from his experiences, combined with a solid grasp of European history, provided much of the raw material for the book. On War represents the compilation of his most cogent observations.

    Note: Clausewitz states that Napoleon's tactics were not revolutionary at all and that Napoleonic Warfare did not change anything greatly in military history. The technology of weaponry for the most part remained static, and new strategies weren't developed, but rather Napoleon refurbished old ones, mixing them into one grand strategy.

    [edit] Synopsis

    The book contains a wealth of historical examples used to illustrate its various concepts. Frederick II of Prussia (the Great) figures prominently for having made very efficient use of the limited forces at his disposal. Napoleon also is a central figure.

    Among many strands of thought, three stand out as essential to Clausewitz' concept:

    • War must never be seen as a purpose to itself, but as a means of physically forcing one's will on an opponent ("War is not merely a political act, but also a real political instrument, a continuation of political commerce, a carrying out of the same by other means."[1]).
    • The military objectives in war that support one's political objectives fall into two broad types: "war to achieve limited aims" and war to "disarm” the enemy: “to render [him] politically helpless or militarily impotent."
    • The course of war will tend to favor the party employing more force and resources (a notion extended by Germany's leaders in World War One into "total war"—the pursuit of complete military victory regardless of the political consequences).

    Military strategy is a national defence policy implemented by military organisations to pursue desired strategic goals.[1] Derived from the Greek strategos, strategy when it appeared in use during the 18th century[2], was seen in its narrow sense as the "art of the general"[3], 'the art of arrangement' of troops.[4] Military strategy deals with the planning and conduct of campaigns, the movement and disposition of forces, and the deception of the enemy. The father of modern strategic study, Carl von Clausewitz, defined military strategy as "the employment of battles to gain the end of war." Liddell Hart's definition put less emphasis on battles, defining strategy as "the art of distributing and applying military means to fulfil the ends of policy" Hence, both gave the pre-eminence to political aims over military goals, ensuring civilian control of the military.

    Contents

    [hide]

    [edit] Fundamentals

    "You must not fight too often with one enemy, or you will teach him all your art of war." Napoleon Bonaparte

    Military strategy is the plan and execution of the contest between very large groups of armed adversaries. It involves each opponent's diplomatic, informational, military, and economic resources wielded against the other's resources to gain supremacy or reduce the opponent's will to fight. It is a principle tool to secure the national interest. A contemporary military strategy is developed via military science. [5] It is as old as society itself. It is a subdiscipline of warfare and of foreign policy. In comparison, grand strategy is that strategy of the largest of organizations which are currently the nation state, confederation, or international alliances. Military strategy has its origins before the Battle of the Ten Kings and will endure through the space age. It is larger in perspective than military tactics which is the disposition and maneuver of units on a particular sea or battlefield.[6]

    [edit] Background

    Military strategy in the 19th century was still viewed as one of a trivium of "arts" or "sciences" that govern the conduct of warfare; the others being tactics, the execution of plans and manœuvering of forces in battle, and logistics, the maintenance of an army. The view had prevailed since the Roman times, and the borderline between strategy and tactics at this time was blurred, and sometimes categorization of a decision is a matter of almost personal opinion. Carnot, during the French Revolutionary Wars thought it simply involved concentration of troops.[7]

    The Battle of Siffin, illustration from a 19th century manuscript by Muhammad Rafi Bazil.

    Strategy and tactics are closely related and exist on the same continuum.

     

     

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