Sunday, 30 October 2016
von Kleist Freikorps Lancers
Freikorps Kleist Lancers from Foundry. The entire Foundry Freikorps Kleist range is comprehensive and a great pleasure to paint although the horses (as usual) have a great deal of flash and need some cleaning. They need to change their moulds more frequently.
Saturday, 22 October 2016
Kleist Freikorps Hussars
Freikorps Hussars von Kleist using Foundry figures.
I especially like the top three pictures. It is as if you opened a window in your garret bedroom one morning to see what that dreadful noise was.....only to hear a regiment charging through the village shouting rudely in a freikorps manner.
The Duchy of Modena
My Piedmontese army is largely finished.
Ten out of twelve battalions have been painted and two cavalry regiments. The
artillery is on my table to complete leaving only the infantry mentioned above
and two dragoon regiments.
So my mind has turned to whom they should
fight. A number of factors needed to be considered – reliable painting sources,
flags, nice figures I want to paint and a real contemporary opponent. This
boiled down to a choice between Spain, France, Naples and Modena. I want to do
the Spanish for sure but I am waiting for samples of figures because the coat
is unusual and is buttoned up the front. The French, for the moment, I want to
avoid as they only participated in the campaign in the Alps which, at the
moment, interests me less than the campaign in central Italy. But I love the
French figures from Black Hussar so I have decided to paint the army of Modena
using these figures from Black Hussar.
Modena was swiftly invaded by Piedmont in
1742 with the Duke fleeing south to join the Spanish. So the Modenese army
falls into two distinctive shapes (in a similar way to the Saxons in the later
SYW); firstly the larger pre-invasion force and secondly, the much smaller
remnants fighting allied to the Spanish. It is the former I wish to replicate.
The campaign was too swift to have been of much interest but I will assume that
‘my’ Modenese army will be able to withdraw south to, eventually, unite with
the Spanish or Neapolitans or both.
There are three decent uniform sources but
they need to be treated carefully.
1)The Vinkhuizen plates are lovey and
detailed but are dated wrongly I suspect. Many show dates of 1740’s (clearly
typed in the corners)but the uniforms shown date from the SYW. For example the
dragoons are in blue (which is correct for the SYW) but in the WAS they wore
red coat.
2) Steven Manleys excellent books. I
consider these to be the best source, in particular “The War of the Austrian
Succession, Part VII, Uniforms of the Italian States (Piedmont, Genoa, Modena
and Naples). This is my primary source.
3) Kronoskaf for the Modena Army in the SYW
which has good examples of the flags which had not changed.
Here is Manley’s excellent introduction to
the Modena section.
“Charles Emmanuel III of Piedmont-Sardinia
regarded the Duchy of Modena with some avarice. The ruling Duke, Francesco III
d’Este [his picture is at the top of the blog] held a General’s commission in
the Austrian Army, had been a close personal friend of the late Emperor Charles
VI and the living Marshal Traun [who commanded Austrian troops in Italy].
Additionally he had no particluar desire to see a Spanish client state (Milan)
established on his northern borders to match the one already existing (Naples)
[ technically the Papacy was between both but they were neutral and weak] to
his south. All this should have made Modena an obvious candidate for
participation on the Austro-Piedmontese side.
However, the gradual expansion of Modena’s
small. But highly efficient army, and the good terms that Francesco was on with
the Austrian establishment, led Charles Emmanuel to perceive the Duke as a
future rival in Italy. Sensing the latent threat to his dominion from
Piedmont-Sardinia, Duke Francesco felt obliged to balance his position by
opening negotiations for a defensive alliance with the Spanish. By way of
“self-fulfilling prophecy” the rumours of these negotiations gave Charles Emmanuel III the pretext he needed
to stage an invasion of Modena – with the half-hearted acquiescence of the
Austrians as they need the Modenese bridges in order to get to Naples. A
massive blow by the Piedmontese-Sardinians rapidly over-ran the Duchy and the
Duke fled south to join the Spanish in the south.”
Here is
another (heavily edited) article by Alberto
MENZIANI that shows a
different angle:
“Under Francis III (1737-1780), a prince
of remarkable personality, great ambition and very interested in military
matters, the Este military apparatus was quickly modernized and
upgraded. In 1739 the Duke was in fact able to send two regiments of 800
men each, under the command of colonels Villeneuve and Prini, to fight against
the Turks in the Balkan Peninsula with the imperial army. The campaign was
not favorable for the Christian army, but the Este troops fought bravely at the
Battle of Grocka and the defense of Belgrade, then returned to Modena in the
first half of 1740, decimated by losses suffered in combat, and even more by
hardship and disease (including the two commanders who perished in the
expedition).
Then the war of the Austrian
Succession broke out and, on April 30, 1742 the Duchy concluded an alliance
with Spain, pledging to make available to the latter five thousand well-equipped
men. It was the Swiss regiment de Grooss (Maderna), with a strength, on
June 4, 1742 of 1,296 men, and Palude regiment, named after its commander Count Cesare of Palude, a veteran of
the Balkan adventure, which on May 7, 1742 numbered 1,240; three regiments
of "national" infantry formed with elements from the militia (about
1,800 men in total); and one hundred twenty gunners and three hundred
sixty soldiers cavalry, half horse, half-dragons (Montecuccoli Regiment
Cuirassiers and Dragoons regiment Rangoni). Francesco III also had two other
two regiments "national", in 1740-1741 having raised five, namely the
"Reggio", the "Modena", the "Mirandola", the
"Frignano" and the "Garfagnana", who wore white uniforms and different distinctive facings. Almost all these troops, however,
were almost immediately put out of action, because the Austro-Sardinian blocked
the towns of Modena and Mirandola forcing them to surrender, after an honorable
resistance, in June-July 1742 while the Spanish army of the Duke of Montemar
remained inactive on the Papal frontier. In the remainder of the conflict d’Este
hired another two Swiss regiments,
Bavois and Mottet, which remained in ducal service until the end of the war,
when they were merged into one unit under the command of Jean François Bressencour in February 1749.The
Royal Armoury of Turin still holds seven flags of infantry and one of cavalry
pennant of Modena, captured by the Piedmontese but so fortunately preserved.”
In
conclusion, I will paint a small-ish Modenese army. I expect it to be smaller
than the Piedmontese one I have almost finished but perhaps it will be of better
quality.
Lastly, here is a link to the Spencer Wilkinson book "The defence of Piedmont 1742-1748" printed in 1927
http://hdl.handle.net/2027/mdp.39015066408561
Lastly, here is a link to the Spencer Wilkinson book "The defence of Piedmont 1742-1748" printed in 1927
http://hdl.handle.net/2027/mdp.39015066408561
Saturday, 15 October 2016
Frei Korps Dragoons von Kleist
These are great Foundry figures. This regiment of dragoons had a unique hat - a fur Grenadier bearskin and would be even more spectacular with a more colourful uniform.
...and more Prussian officers.
This finishes off the Prussian mounted officers. In the front rank are generals for the Advance Guard plus a Dragoon Brigade general. In the rear rank are ten mounted junior officers commanding batteries of artillery.
Thursday, 6 October 2016
7/30 Kanitz Grenadiers
I have not posted much recently but actually I have been busy with SYW stuff and I have over twenty guns to do in the next few weeks. This year will see the end of the Prussians and next year will be something similar - Russians and Kreis.
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