Sunday 22 February 2009

Dutch WAS Regiment Glinstra



The Dutch army in the WAS was very colourful - regiments of foot wore a variety of coat colours; blue, white, red and dark green. This regiment, Glinstra, had white coats with pale blue facings. Flags are by the excellent Vaubanner and the figures are from the equally excellent WAS range by Eureka.

Friday 20 February 2009

Maybe not so "Lucky Luckner" II









I've gleened this potted biography of Luckner because he had such an interesting military career - from respected service in the SYW to a rendez-vous with Madame Guillotine.

Johann Nikolaus, Count Luckner (12 January 1722 - 4 January 1794 in Paris) was a German in French service who rose to become a Marshal of France.

He was born the son of an innkeeper and hop dealer on January 12, 1722 in Cham which is located in the poor, heavily forested Upper Palatinate. He received his early education from the Jesuits in Passau. Entering the Bavarian Army in 1737, he served with the Infantry Regiment Morawitzky. By 1745 he was an Oberleutnant in the Ferrari Hussars. In 1757, Luckner entered the Hanoverian army as Rittmeister, and he raised a troop of hussars, which took his name. The success of the regiment is reflected in the career of its commanding officer He rose in rank each year, Lieutenant-Colonel in 1758, Colonel in 1759, Major-General in January of 1760 (adding the title "von") and Lieutenant-General in 1761 (when he was only 39). He was held in great repute by the commander of the allied forces, Prince Ferdinand and this praise can be seen in a letter from Ferdinand to Lt.General von Wangenheim: "Your Excellency may also convey to Colonel von Luckner the particular congratulations of His Serene Highness, and assure him that our confidence in him is so firm that we are never in any doubt that, whenever he and his splendid regiment undertake a task, it cannot fail to have a fortunate and successful outcome.”

Luckner’s Hussars increased in size over the years, until, in 1760, it contained four squadrons. The first officers were Hungarian and most of the enlisted were foreigners, mainly Dutch. However, as the reputation of the unit began to grow, natives of Hanover began entering. The unit was heavily involved in the kleinkrieg in the Western theatre. There were two uniforms – one largely green with a mirliton and the more famous white and red one which came about in 1760. The unit was present at Warburg incurring the wrath of the British command because it stayed to pillage the baggage of the retreating French. At Krefeld, June 1758, the regiment was located in the left wing along with the cavalry regiments Hammerstein (No. 2B), Dachenhausen Dragoons (No. 5C), Ruesch Hussars (No. 5), and Grothaus (No. 3A) as part of the brigade under Lt.-Gen. Spörcken.

After the war, in 1763, he accepted an appointment in the French Army as Lieutenant- General and command of the Regiment Burgundy.

In 1784 he was made a Danish count. He supported the French Revolution, and the year 1791 saw Luckner being made a Marshal of France. In 1792, Luckner first served as commander of the Army of the Rhine, during which time Rouget de Lisle dedicated to him the Chant de Guerre pour l'Armée du Rhin (War Song of the Army of the Rhine), which was to become better known as the Marseillaise. As commander of the Army of the North he captured the Flemish cities of Menen and Kortrijk, but then had to retreat towards Lille. After the flight of Lafayette he was made generalissimo with orders to build a Reserve Army near Châlons-sur-Marne. However, the National Convention was not satisfied with his progress and Choderlos de Laclos was ordered to support or replace him.

After resigning he pressed his claim for pension on a bankrupt regime and headed to Paris in 1792. Under suspicion of the radicals, who were now in power, he suffered the fate of many who held a title - meeting the guillotine on January 4,1794 aged 71.
The carillon of the town hall in the Bavarian town of Cham rings the Marseillaise every day at 12.05 p.m. to commemorate the city's most famous son, Nikolaus Graf von Luckner.

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The hussar figures I have painted, 16 of them in total, come from the great new range of 25mm Saxon SYW from Eureka. Although the Saxons never had hussars wearing the colpack, Eureka have made both types of figures. There is a great variety in both the horses and the riders and I enjoyed painting them in their 2nd uniform.

Sunday 8 February 2009

Limbering Up







Firstly, let me apologise if my photography is not up to scratch but I’m experimenting with assorted photo-enhancement software at the moment and my techno-phobic brain is on strike.

(Top picture) A unit of Poles for my Renaissance Deluge armies. This is a unit of Haiduks (figures by TAG) with flags of my own creation. The striped one (red-white-blue) appears to be a common Polish one for the period and the other is a combination (using Microsoft Paint) of the Virgin Mary with the white Eagle. These are great fun to paint as the colour scheme is largely up to you, although blue appears to have been designated for Polish infantry.

(Picture two). Last week has been ‘limber’ week and although I have posted pictures of the British 6pdr battery for my Pragmatic/SYW army, I’ve only just finished off their limbers.

(Picture three). Hanoverian 12pdr battery plus their limbers. Some war gamers leave out limbers from their batteries and I quite understand the view as they are
expensive, time-consuming to paint and often irrelevant to the actual battle. I like them because they take up such a large space behind their batteries which gets in the way of deploying troops. The guns and limbers are by Front Rank. The artillery crew are by Foundry from their Prussian range and are particularly superb figures.

(Picture four). In the Minden OOB a certain Major Haase (or Hase in some accounts) commands the Hanoverian artillery. This is my idea of what he looked like and I used a Foundry civilian for the purpose and just gave him a sash with green-stuff. He has that self-satisfied look of someone used to getting his own way although I daresay he might need help re-mounting his horse. I'll try to do a better picture soon.

(Bottom picture) Its quite in-vogue to show pictures of your dog so not to be outdone here is one of Louis (or Lewis sometimes) my Dalmatian in full camouflage mode on the kitchen floor.

I’ve been weighing up the pros and cons of which armies to finish off so that we can actually have a game soon. Given that I have to paint both armies and that my friends in the area need co-opting in as none are war gamers, I’ve decided to try to finish these SYW armies to a point where they are useable. On the Allied side, which I have been concentrating on, two full infantry columns or divisions are finished and I just need to increase the cavalry from one brigade to three. On the French side, I will aim to finish a line division as soon as possible and add some cavalry too – all before August or September if I can. It’s a tall order but I’m nothing if not ambitious!