Marvel Comics introduced a version of Conan in 1970 with
Conan the Barbarian, written by Roy Thomas with art initially by
Barry Windsor-Smith, then
John Buscema and Ernie Chan (aka Ernie Chua). The successful
Conan the Barbarian series spawned the more adult, black-and-white
Savage Sword of Conan in 1974, by Thomas, Buscema, and
Alfredo Alcala.
Savage Sword of Conan soon became one of the most popular comic series in the 1970s. The Marvel Conan stories were also adapted as a newspaper comic strip which appeared daily and Sunday from September 4, 1978, to April 12, 1981. Originally written by Roy Thomas and illustrated by John Buscema, the strip was continued by several different Marvel artists and writers. Other Marvel Conan titles over the years include
Savage Tales (1971–1975, issues 1–5 only),
Giant-Size Conan (1974–1975),
King Conan/Conan the King (1980–1989),
Conan the Adventurer (1994–1995),
Conan (1995–1996), and
Conan the Savage (1995–1996). After the 2019 return of Conan to Marvel, new titles included
Conan: Serpent War (2019–2020 miniseries),
Conan: Battle for the Serpent Crown (2020 miniseries), alongside the reappearance of
Conan the Barbarian (2019–2021) and
Savage Sword of Conan (2019), which both received new #1s but retained the original "Legacy Numbering" continuing where their original Marvel series left off. Conan later appeared in the pages of
Savage Avengers.
King Conan caused controversy when it included a character named Matoaka, the real name of
Pocahontas, and with a sexualized design and a backstory similar to that of the actual Native American woman. There was backlash at what was perceived a disrespectful portrayal, so Marvel announced that name would be changed in later issues, reprints and digital editions. Writer Jason Aaron issued an apology, and pointed that "This new character is a supernatural, thousand-year-old princess of a cursed island within a world of pastiche and dark fantasy and was never intended to be based on anyone from history".
Marvel Epic Collections Awards Academy of Comic Book Arts Shazam Awards: 1970 • Best New Talent: Barry Smith 1971 • Best Continuing Feature: Conan the Barbarian • Best Writer (Dramatic): Roy Thomas 1973 • Best Individual Story (Dramatic): "Song of Red Sonja" from
Conan the Barbarian #24 by Roy Thomas and Barry Smith 1974 • Best Continuing Feature: Conan the Barbarian • Best Penciller (Dramatic): John Buscema • Superior Achievement by an Individual: Roy Thomas ==Dark Horse Comics==