Sunday, 24 June 2012

10th Belzunce









The twelve most senior regiments in the SYW French army each had four field battalions. Numerically, regiments 1 to 6 were known as the 'Vieux Corps' (the Old Corps or body)and regiments 7 to 12 were known as the 'Petits Vieux'(the 'little' Old Corps or body). This regiment, number 10, as well as regiment 9 Auvergne, had purple facings. It also had one of the finest reputations for bravery and steadfastness in the entire army and, in almost every battle it participated in, it is to be found in a place of prominence in the front line. On this basis I would rank it as 'veteran'.




The pictures above show all four battalions in line. All the figures are by Crusader (28mm) with the exception of three officers, two of which are by Foundry and one is by Eagle Miniatures.



The livery of the drummers is entirely my own fabrication as I was unable to find out the correct livery for Armand, Vicomte de Belzunce .

Saturday, 16 June 2012

115th La Dauphine












Stand by for the briefest of history lessons. La Dauphine was the name given to the wife of the eldest son (the Dauphin) of the regnant King of France. In this case, the Dauphin was another Louis, son of Louis XV, who lived from 1729-1765. His first wife Marie Teresa of Spain gave birth to a daughter then promptly died. This regiment was raised in 1747 in her honour and, for a time, would have had her coat of arms placed on the flags. After her death, Louis then married the Saxon Princess Maria Josepha and her arms are in the first picture and on the flags.


She was to give birth to three Kings of France (not to mention a host of daughters) Louis XVI, Louis XVIII and Charles X.




The regiment was probably recruited in Saxony. It disappeared in 1760 when it was amalgamated with another German regiment.




The figures are by Crusader except for a Foundry officer and an Elite standard bearer (the left hand one as you look at them).



114th Saint Germain



Here is the 114th 'German' Regiment in French service during the SYW named after it's colonel-proprietor Saint Germain. This is one of those small one-battalion regiments that was raised in 1747 and lasted until 1760 when it was absorbed into another German regiment.It had a very Swedish look to it and I have searched to see whether he had any connection to Sweden but without luck.


The figures are all by Crusader except the chunky officer with the soup-plate hands who is by Foundry.



Sunday, 10 June 2012

108th Bergh



Here is a 28mm SYW 'German' regiment in French service - 108th Bergh. It is a melange of figures from three manufacturers showing that they do all match in size-wise. Most are by Crusader although the officer on the far right of the battalion is from Elite ( a decent range of very active looking figures) and a standard bearer (the left hand one of the pair) from Eagle Miniatures. This latter range is a huge disappointment and, in fact, I threw away all the rankers and just kept some of the command.


These one-battalion regiments were very junior in the French infantry hierarchy and, although some performed creditably, one should not rate them very highly. Over this coming week I'll be showing you St.Germain (114th) as well as La Dauphine (115th). They all wear dark blue coats and have very decorative flags.


Monday, 4 June 2012

AWI pictures











These rather nice pictures were taken by Isabel, the 10 year old daughter of my friend in New York, Jon, and they were, I think, for a school project. I'm posting them because they are such good atmospheric pictures and, if I had the time, that would be the type of picture that should litter this blog.


They were framed against natural woodland which is the best way to blend the wargaming into the natural and I don't think she used any 'photoshopping' techniques at all.

Saturday, 2 June 2012

IR37 Joseph Esterhazy in 40mm







You've recently seen this regiment in 25mm, which I did for a friend, and now this regiment has been done in 40mm for my own collection. There are 24 figures per battalion and I use my own system for showing deployment in 3 ranks or 4 ranks - thus enabling use during both the WAS and SYW. The pictures above are all in the 3 ranks of figures (to show deployment in 4 ranks on the battlefield). When I use them in the latter SYW in 3 ranks on the battlefield they will be in two ranks on the table.


My Prussians are in 20s but I plan to increase them to 28s (in 2 ranks) so that they always outnumber the Austrians, which they should.


I have one more Hungarian Regiment to paint before I call it quits on 'Phase One' of the Austrians and move on to the Prussians. The figures above are all Sash & Saber and lets hope Chris can produce some more cavalry soon.