The feature was created by writer
Gaylord Du Bois and artist
Jesse Marsh in
Tarzan #25 (1951), and ran continuously through #156 (1966). Artist
Russ Manning did some of his earliest comics work on this series, beginning in
Tarzan #39 (Dec. 1952). The ending of the series generally coincided with Russ Manning's being assigned to illustrate Tarzan (Jesse Marsh, had been going blind from diabetes; he retired from the assignment) beginning #154. Before he died, Marsh did illustrate Jon of the Kalahari, a Korak back-up feature created and written by Gaylord Du Bois. That strip was killed upon his death. Three issues after Tarzan #154, even with Mike Royer sharing the labor doing inks, the Brothers of the Spear strip was suspended. Manning continued as the Tarzan illustrator for the series. A new back-up feature, created and written by Du Bois, "Jungle Girl", illustrated by Dan Spiegel, replaced Brothers of the Spear. New Brothers of the Spear stories appeared in Tarzan #158, 160, and 161 (illustrated by Manning), and later in #202 and 203 (illustrated by
Mike Royer). An additional story, "Treachery in Aba-Zulu" (illustrated by Manning), had appeared in
Dell Giant #51 (
Tarzan, King of the Jungle) in 1961.
DC Comics licensed the rights to Tarzan in 1972. The rights to Brothers of the Spear were retained by Western Publishing. Western's Gold Key line published the 17-issue
Brothers of the Spear series (June 1972 – Feb. 1976). Western's Whitman line published issue #18 in May 1982, with reprinted material only. Du Bois wrote the series beginning with issue #2.
Jesse Santos did the artwork for the first 12 issues, followed by
Dan Spiegle. In 2012,
Dark Horse Comics started a hardcover archive series. The first volume reprints strips from
Tarzan #25–67. The second volume reprints strips from
Tarzan #68–109. The third volume reprints strips from "Tarzan" #110-156, #160-161 and #202-203. The Manning-illustrated
Brothers of the Spear story "Tembo! Tembo!" in Tarzan #158 was reprinted in
Golden Comics Digest #9 (March 1970). The 12 page story, "Treachery in Aba-Zulu", in
Dell Giant #51, has been reprinted three times (per Grand Comics Database online), but not in the United States. ==References==