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Replica M1873 Antique Finish Quick Draw Revolver, Auburn Grooved Grips Non-Firing
These Old West Replica fast draw pistols are our most popular replica gun! The M1873 fast draw replica pistol has realistic action that works just like the original. Plus we've added Auburn Finger Grooved Grips. With this classic military collectible, you can 'Cock it and pull it' - just like they did in the old days. This model gun has a 4.75" barrel and a nickel finish.

Key Features:
Authentic Details
Auburn Finger Grooved Grips
Non-fireable
Can Fire Caps
Functional Action Mechanism

Measurements:
Overall Length: 10.5 Inches
Weight: 2.2 lbs

This is a non-firing replica of the original. This piece replicates the original in size, weight and appearance, and functions much like the original. However, this replica cannot be made to fire or part interchanged.

It is the customer's responsibility to check all local laws pertaining to an item before you place your order.  We are not responsible for packages confiscated due to Customs inspections.

CERTAIN STATES WE CAN NOT SHIP TO: 
NJ, NYC, RI
Replica M1873 Antique Finish Quick Draw Revolver, Ivory Grooved Grips Non-Firing
These Old West Replica fast draw pistols are our most popular replica gun! The M1873 fast draw replica pistol has realistic action that works just like the original. Plus we've added Ivory Finger Grooved Grips. With this classic military collectible, you can 'Cock it and pull it' - just like they did in the old days. This model gun has a 4.75" barrel and a nickel finish.

Key Features:
Authentic Details
Ivory Finger Grooved Grips
Non-fireable
Can Fire Caps
Functional Action Mechanism

Measurements:
Overall Length: 10.5 Inches
Weight: 2.2 lbs

This is a non-firing replica of the original. This piece replicates the original in size, weight and appearance, and functions much like the original. However, this replica cannot be made to fire or part interchanged.

It is the customer's responsibility to check all local laws pertaining to an item before you place your order.  

CERTAIN STATES WE CAN NOT SHIP TO: 
NJ, NYC, RI

Scandinavian Vendel Chieftain's Sword - Tin Plated - Brass Hilt Accents - PRS411
This 8th Century Scandinavian Vendel sword has a hilt which is richly adorned in well-cast detailing which marks it as a weapon of status for an elite Vendel warrior or Chieftain. The blade is tempered high carbon steel which is stoutly mounted into a hilt of tin plated brass which is embellished with antiqued brass banded accenting. In this period tin was used as a decorative element and was prized for its silver-like appearance. The grip is leather over hardwood and the pyramidal shaped pommel is inlaid with vibrant scarlet enamel to recreate the vibrant inset garnet gemstones of originals. Like original Vendel swords, this one has a two-part pommel with its cap secured by twin rivets. Like many later period originals, the ring on the pommel is in a stylized and symbolic form rather than being a freely moving component.

Included with the sword is a wooden scabbard which is tightly bound in leather and accented with a plated brass chape and locket. A wooden suspension loop is secured with leather bands and this suspension loop can be used to sling this sword and scabbard from your own baldric or belt.

The Pre-Viking Vendel era of Sweden was dominated by an aristocratic warrior culture who outfitted themselves and their elite warrior retainers with swords and helmets that were immaculate works of art in their detailing. Adorning wargear not only displayed status and warrior prestige, but it also made sense to keep much of ones wealth close at hand, rendered in sumptuous, yet utilitarian form.

Much of the knowledge of the Vendel culture comes from finds at several grave field sites where these elite warriors were often interred into burial mounds with their wargear and other goods. It seems that once in a generation, a particularly wealthy or famed chieftain would be buried in a boat laden with his wargear, household utilities, luxury items and sacrificial animals – all that he would need for a voyage into the afterlife.

Regarded by their peers as mounted warriors of outstanding skill, the Vendels created swords and helmets with lavish amounts of fine detailing which survive today as examples of the very high levels of craftsmanship available at the time.

Features:
 * Brass Hilt with Tin Plated Accents
* EN45 High Carbon Steel Blade
* Red Inlaid Pommel Cap
* Complete with leather covered scabbard

Specifications:
Overall Length: 35-3/4''
Blade Length: 29-3/8''
Grip: 3-1/2''
P.O.B.: 5-1/4''
Thickness: 4.3 mm - 4 mm
Width: 51 mm
Edge: Unsharpened
Pommel: Nut - Riveted
Weight: 3 lb 5.1 oz
Blade: [EN45 High Carbon Steel]
Class: Battle Ready
Culture: Viking
Manufacturer: Deepeeka
The Tudors: England's Notorious Dynasty Book 27-978-0-385-34077-9
For the first time in decades, here, in a single volume, is a fresh look at the fabled Tudor dynasty, comprising some of the most enigmatic figures ever to rule a country. Acclaimed historian G. J. Meyer reveals the flesh-and-bone reality in all its wild excess.

In 1485, young Henry Tudor, whose claim to the throne was so weak as to be almost laughable, crossed the English Channel from France at the head of a ragtag little army and took the crown from the family that had ruled England for almost four hundred years. Half a century later his son, Henry VIII, desperate to rid himself of his first wife in order to marry a second, launched a reign of terror aimed at taking powers no previous monarch had even dreamed of possessing. In the process he plunged his kingdom into generations of division and disorder, creating a legacy of blood and betrayal that would blight the lives of his children and the destiny of his country.

The boy king Edward VI, a fervent believer in reforming the English church, died before bringing to fruition his dream of a second English Reformation. Mary I, the disgraced daughter of Catherine of Aragon, tried and failed to reestablish the Catholic Church and produce an heir. And finally came Elizabeth I, who devoted her life to creating an image of herself as Gloriana the Virgin Queen but, behind that mask, sacrificed all chance of personal happiness in order to survive. 
 
The Tudors weaves together all the sinners and saints, the tragedies and triumphs, the high dreams and dark crimes, that reveal the Tudor era to be, in its enthralling, notorious truth, as momentous and as fascinating as the fictions audiences have come to love.
Cathar Castles: Fortresses / Albigensian Crusade 27-978-1-84603-066-6
In the early 12th century AD a large area of present-day France was not under the direct control of the French king. In fact, the French king's direct authority stretched little further than Paris and the area immediately around it, the Ile de France. Many of the other regions were semi-independent duchies and counties, controlled by, amongst others, the King of England and the Holy Roman Emperor. One such area free from direct French control was the Languedoc, the area stretching from the Massif Central south to the Pyrenees, and as far as the river Rhone to the east. This area was under the loose overlordship of the counts of Toulouse, and by the beginning of the 12th century the whole region had become the centre of an early form of Protestantism called Catharism that flourished to an extraordinary degree and threatened the rule of the Roman Catholic Church. Pope Innocent III, alarmed at this heresy and the unwillingness of the southern nobility to do much to uproot it, launched a crusade in 1209 against European Christians. The crusading army, represented the established Church consisting predominatly of northern French knights. They saw this as an opportunity both to 'take the cross' and to obtain new lands and wealth for themselves more conveniently than crusading to the Holy land. This, the Albigensian Crusade, became a brutal struggle between the north and the south of France as much as between orthodox Roman Catholic and heretic Cathar.

The inhabitants of the Languedoc had always relied for their safety upon a series of strongly fortified walled cities, such as Albi, Carcassonne, Béziers, Toulouse and a large number of fortified hill-top villages and castles which dotted the countryside. These so-called 'Cathar Castles' now became the last refuge against the invading crusaders and the conflict developed into a series of protracted and bloody sieges that lasted for over 30 years. The author describes these two very different types of fortification, the walled city and the hill-top castle. He explains why they were positioned where they were, how they were built, and the defensive principles behind their construction, and also reviews how well they withstood the test of the Albigensian Crusade.
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