A Spanish man has been ordered to cough up $21,000 for hawking unauthorized reproductions of action figures like Conan the Barbarian, Kull and El Borak over the internet.

Brooklyn federal Judge Frederic Block found Ricardo Jove Sanchez liable under trademark infringement laws, saying he sold the collectibles despite knowing their likenesses were owned by Conan Properties International LLC, and Robert E. Howard Properties Inc.

Sanchez peddled the figures of Conan, Kull, El Borak, Soloman Kane, Ironhand, Bran Mak Morn, and Dark Agnes over Facebook and Kickstarter for a three-year period, the companies alleged.

Yet, when he was told to stop, the fraudster simply changed the names of his replicas and continued business as usual, according to Block.

“For example, he changed ‘Conan the Barbarian’ to ‘The Barbarian’ and ‘Dark Agnes’ to ‘Swordswoman’ ” in his ads, the papers say.

Block ordered Sanchez to cough up $3,000 per character he ripped off, plus additional damages.

He is also permanently barred from making or selling any figures based on Howard’s works in the future.

Howard, who died in 1936, wrote a series of popular pulp fiction works during the 1930s.

Sanchez couldn’t be reached for comment.