Sir Adrian Carton de Wiart in 28mm scale. The miniature is cast in tin* and comes without a base.
Material: Tin
Number of pieces: 2
Born on 5 May 1880 in Brussels into an aristocratic family, Adrian Paul Ghislain Carton de Wiart’s early life was already unusual. Although Belgian by birth, he later naturalized as British. From a young age he navigated multiple cultures—spending time in Belgium, England, and Egypt—and developed a restless spirit that would define his military career.
He attended the Oratory School in England and later matriculated (briefly) at Oxford. But when war came calling, he abandoned academia and enlisted—falsely claiming his age and identity—to serve in the Boer War.
Carton de Wiart’s military record reads like an epic of survival and audacity. He served in the Boer War, the First World War, and the Second World War—often in the thick of the action, despite grievous injuries.
In 1916, he was awarded the Victoria Cross, Britain’s highest decoration for valor.
After WWI, Carton de Wiart served in Poland, supporting the young Polish state in the chaos of postwar border conflicts.
Even in advanced age he remained in the fray:
Carton de Wiart was more than his wounds. He was known as a man of bold speech, audacity, and bitter humour. With an eyepatch, one missing hand, and scars across his body, he was a walking legend—half pirate, half warrior.
Winston Churchill once remarked that governments may talk, but force is the “only real and unanswerable power”—words that suit Carton de Wiart’s life approach.
He is often cited as a model for Evelyn Waugh’s fictional Brigadier Ritchie-Hook in Sword of Honour, an eccentric and uncompromising soldier.
Carton de Wiart passed away on 5 June 1963 in County Cork, Ireland, at the age of 83.