Knobkerries were an indispensable weapon of war both in Africa and abroad. In Africa, the weapon found particular use among
Nguni peoples. Among the
Zulu people they are known as
iwisa. The iwisa was not typically used in combat – though they were occasionally used as thrown weapons in place of the throwing spear or
isijula. Instead, the Zulu used iwisa as
swagger sticks, ceremonial objects, or even as
snuff containers. In the 20th century, the Zulu nationalist movement
Inkatha viewed iwisa as traditional weapons and lobbied for the right to carry such weapons in public. However, many sources emphasise the historical use of the
iwisa in close-combat, where it was used to deliver blows, and also in executions. A detachable knobkerrie is among the features of the
Farmingdale Statue, a wooden figure attributed to the
Zulu or another
Nguni group, radiocarbon dated to approximately A.D. 1630 and discovered in
South Farmingdale, New York in 1961. The Ndebele variant was known as
induku and is similar in design to the Zulu iwisa. It was used as a swagger stick or thrown weapon. The induku could also be fashioned into the handle of a fighting axe which, unlike the Zulu, the Ndebele used as weapons of war. Tsonga clubs were also similar to the Zulu and Ndebele type with spherical heads but variants with more elongated oval heads were also used in what is now Mozambique. The Sotho under Mosheshe did not adopt Zulu style weapons and tactics and so unlike the Zulus it was regarded as an important weapon of war. The weapon was used in
No Man's Land by the poet
Siegfried Sassoon as relayed in the
Sherston trilogy, his pseudonymous autobiography. During the
Apartheid era in South Africa, they were often carried and used by protesters and sometimes by the police opposing them. Knobkerries are still widely carried, especially in rural areas, while in times of peace it serves as a walking-stick, sometimes ornamental. Knobkerries are still commonly carried by protesters. Knobkerries commonly feature on national and other symbols in Southern Africa. In South Africa they feature on the
South African Coat of Arms, though lying down symbolising peace. They are also depicted on the
Order of Mendi for Bravery. A knobkerrie appeared on the former
flag of
Lesotho between 1987 and 2006, on the
Coat of Arms and royal standards of Lesotho since its independence in 1966, and on the
Coat of Arms of the former (nominally independent) republic of
Ciskei. ==Molamu==