The wonderful thing about our North Star 1672 range is that the figures will do for many different nations armies in the period 1665-1680. This isbecause it is a time just before uniforms, and the figures are all dressed in the fashions common amongst soldiers throughout Western Europe.
This of course includes Britain.The years covered by our range is called the Restoration Period inBritain as it was the time the monarchy, represented by Charles II, was restored after the English Civil War. It was also the genesis of the British Army. Britain, tired of soldiersand war, had disbanded much of it’s forces after the Civil War andOliver Cromwell’s reign. With the return of Charles II to England in1660, the units still under arms swore allegiance to the King andbecame the senior units of the British Army.Some of the infantry regiments:Coldstream GuardsGrenadier GuardsScots Guards1st Regiment (Royal Scots)2nd Regiment (The Queen’s)3rd Regiment (The Buffs)st
Colour.
emerged alive.” In Livingstone’s day it seems that one way ofgetting rid of nosy visitors to the region was to provide themwith a guide with secret instructions to lead them into thecountry of the Ila, who could then be relied on to do the dirtywork. Coillard, writing in 1888, listed several explorers andtraders who had disappeared and were believed to have beenkilled by the Ila. However in the 1880s a couple of theirintended victims managed to get away to tell the tale. The firstof these was the Bohemian explorer Dr. Emil Holub, whoarrived in the country in 1886 with his wife and a colleaguenamed Oswald Sollner. The couple were saved from an Ilawar party by an amazing display of shooting by Mrs. Holub,but Sollner was speared to death and the survivors fled fromthe country. Then in 1888 the famous elephant hunter F. C.Selous arrived in Ila territory - apparently by mistake, as heknew all about the Holubs’ experience and had sensiblyintended to avoid the area. One evening, while he wasencamped outside the village of a chief named Minenga, hewas on the receiving end of a shower of spears, the prelude tothe inevitable rush. He managed to escape into a patch of tallgrass but had to leave his rifle behind. Despite this record ofviolence the Ila received a visit soon afterwards by somebrave Methodist missionaries, and proved surprisinglywelcoming. By 1900 they had all meekly accepted Britishrule. It is likely that after the attentions of their predatoryneighbours they were well aware of the benefits of the “PaxBritannica”. Ila WarfareIla warriors were particularly expert with their favouriteweapon, the throwing spear. They did not use shields, butinstead would carry an elephant’s tail, or a bunch of featherson the end of stick, which could be twirled to distract an
enemy’s aim. (Some ideas for figure conversions there. Theywere keen head hunters, so it would also be appropriate to add a few severed heads to the tips of their spears.) Men who wishedto show their contempt for an enemy spearman whose throwhad missed would ostentatiously sweep the ground in front ofthem, a display of coolness which was much admired by theircomrades. Otherwise they relied entirely on speed and mobilityfor protection against missiles. In the colonial era the Ilacontinued to perform dances which resembled mock battles, inwhich the warriors could practice their spear throwing anddodging skills. Even the young boys were said to be able tothrow their spears accurately up to 50 yards, while the longestthrow recorded was an incredible 75 yards. They produced a variety of spear types, designed for differenttasks in hunting and warfare. These included the spike-headed“mumba”, which was the first to be thrown in an engagementand was presumably optimised for long range; the short, broad-headed “impengula”, which resembled a Zulu “iklwa” and wassimilarly used for thrusting at close quarters; and the viciouslybarbed “lukona”, a specialised war spear. In internal Ila battlesthe warriors relied on retrieving spears thrown by theiropponents, and this sort of exchange could continue for manyhours, but against enemies like the Matabele and Barotse, whotended to discharge a few volleys and then close for hand-to-hand fighting, the Ila were at a disadvantage because theyquickly ran out of missiles. The recollections of veterans of theBarotse wars suggest that the Ila were not well prepared forhand-to-hand combat, and were all too often knocked on thehead with knobkerries while looking around for something tothrow. But as mentioned above they did have spears which were obviously designed for stabbing at close quarters, so they canhardly have been completely helpless.
Below. Young Ila warriors with freshly done hair cone or “isusu”.