The significant thing about this lot is that these should be the last five battalions to be added to the French Peninsular War army for the foreseeable future. There are a few limbers to get painted up, and a mule train(!), and a couple of old units of Chasseurs a Cheval which are due to be refurbished and re-based, and that (officially) is that. Oh - and there are a few engineering figures half painted - and then there's a complete 11-battalion division of Kenningtons, command and everything, but they can stay in a box until I decide whether I'm going to paint them...
First picture shows some of the new guys ready for finishing touches to the paintwork, "grassing up" of the figure bases in the statutary house baseboard colour, and then basing - the main purpose of the picture is really to show off a small part of my cherished collection of bottle-tops. You may imagine the volume of Highland Spring that's gone down the hatch to achieve this. Strictly speaking, it will mostly have been Tesco's own brand of bottled water, which is a fraction of the price but comes out of the same hole in the ground in Perthshire.
And here they are a few days later, still to get a couple of flags, but otherwise ready for The Cupboard. Here are a 2nd battalion for the 2nd Nassau, the 4/28e Leger, the Garde de Paris, a battalion of the Chasseurs des Montagnes and the 4th infantry regiment of the Vistula Legion, who - by some bureaucratic oversight - remained in Spain after all their Legion mates were recalled to go to Russia.
I've always wanted a battalion of the Garde de Paris, ever since I saw the illustration of one of their grenadiers in Windrow & Embleton's lovely book. Of course, at that time I was dumb enough to think the whole regiment dressed like the grenadiers. My battalion is, intentionally, very scruffy - mostly Falcata figures, though the grenadiers are old Garrison chaps. They will not be getting a flag - anecdote time...
A few years before my 1812-vintage battalion would have been recruited, the Garde de Paris had been at Bailen, where they lost their eagles and were sent to the prison hulks, an experience which very few of them survived. I understand that the reformed, reorganised regiment of this later period was not issued with replacement colours - units which lost their eagles, however much they might have suffered in the process, were not usually a high priority for the issue of new ones.
Not much glory here, then.
Napoleonic & ECW wargaming, with a load of old Hooptedoodle on this & that
Showing posts with label France. Show all posts
Showing posts with label France. Show all posts
Friday, 17 February 2012
Tuesday, 6 December 2011
Solo Campaign - The French Army
I had some proper work to do this evening, but my computer is not co-operating. I am bored watching McAfee and Internet Explorer wrestling on the floor like a couple of elderly drunks, so here is the first part of the OOB for the solo campaign. My armies use a 33:1 figure scale, and garrison guns, since they can't be carted around, are not included in the army totals.
I haven't finalised the positions on the map yet, but at least I've got a definitive list now. The armies for the other lot will appear shortly (next time I'm bored?). There is a strong whiff of historical accuracy in this OOB, but it is only a whiff....
Artillery Park (Tirlet)
I haven't finalised the positions on the map yet, but at least I've got a definitive list now. The armies for the other lot will appear shortly (next time I'm bored?). There is a strong whiff of historical accuracy in this OOB, but it is only a whiff....
Marmont
French Army
Army of Portugal (Marshal Marmont) approx 21000 inf, 2500 cavalry, 48 guns
Division Foy
Brigade Chemineau
6e Léger (3 Bns) & 69e Ligne (2)
Brigade Desgraviers
39e Ligne (2) & 76e Ligne (2)
Horse battery
Division Clauzel
Brigade Berlier
25e Léger (3) & 27e Ligne (2)
Brigade Barbot
50e Ligne (3) & 59e Ligne (2)
Foot battery
Division Maucune
Brigade Arnauld
15e Ligne (3) & 66e Ligne (2)
Brigade Montfort
82e Ligne (2) & 86e Ligne (2)
Foot battery
Heavy Cavalry (Cavrois)
Brigade Picquet
6e Dragons (3 Sqn) & 11e Dragons (3)
Brigade Boyer
15e Dragons (3) & 25e Dragons (3)
Horse battery
Light Cavalry (Montbrun)
Brigade Curto
3e Hussards (3) & 22e Chasseurs (3)
Brigade Vial
13e Chasseurs (3) & 26e Chasseurs (3)
2 Foot batteries
Siege train
Bridging Train
Engineers & sappers
Army of the Centre (part) (King Joseph & Marshal Jourdan) approx 21000 inf, 1000 cavalry, 20 guns
Division Guye
Royal Guard (Merlin)
Grenadiers (2) & Fusiliers (2) & Voltigeurs (1)
Brigade Casapalacios (Spanish Line troops)
1e (Castilla) Léger (1) & 2e (Toledo ) Ligne (2) & Royal-Etranger (1)
Spanish Guard horse battery
Division Armagnac
Brigade Neuenstein
2e Nassau (2) & Regt de Francfort (1) & 4e Baden (2)
Brigade Chassé
4e Etranger (Prusse) (1) & 4e Hesse-Darmstadt (2) & 3e Berg (1)
Brigade Verbigier de St Paul (Italians)
2e Léger (1) & 3e Ligne (2) & 5e Ligne (2)
Italian Foot battery
Garrison of Badajoz (Phillippon)
5 Bns + various artillery
Cavalry
Brigade Trelliard
4e Dragons (3) & 14e Chasseurs (3) & Lanciers de la Vistule (3)
Army of the North (part) (General Dorsenne) approx 11500 inf, 1500 cavalry, 24 guns
Brigade Leberknoedel (Duchy of Stralsund-Ruegen)
Grenadiers (1) & Fusiliers (2) & Jaegers (1)
Stralsund Foot battery
Various garrisons and flying columns:
28e Léger (1)
Garde de Paris (1)
Chasseurs des Montagnes (1)
Grenadiers Provisoirs (1)
Dragons à pied Provisoirs (2)
4e Vistule (1)
4 Bns de marche
Garrison artillery - various
Cavalry
Brigade Maupoint
13e Cuirassiers (3) & 15e Chasseurs (3) & 5e Chevauxleger-lanciers (3)
Brigade Kleinwinkel (Stralsund-Ruegen)
1e Chevauxlegers (3) & 2e Chevauxlegers (3)
Thursday, 27 October 2011
Drivers' Uniforms - any ideas?
True to my word, I am busily assembling and painting carts and caissons and suchlike - not very many of them, it is true, but by my normal standards 2 or 3 is a rush. This morning's effort is a French pontoon wagon, and I find that I am unsure how to paint the driver. This driver is on foot, so he could even be an actual pontonnier or engineering chap helping out by steering the horses.
I think class distinction would insist that the driver is, in fact, a specialist driver, so I am down to a shortlist of 3 possibilities, thus:
(1) pontoons are Engineering, which comes under the Artillery, so he can be an artillery driver, with grey-blue coat, faced dark blue.
(2) no they aren't - Engineering is a distinct department, and I believe that Engineering drivers wore pale grey faced black.
(3) or he could just be a general transport driver - grey-blue faced chestnut brown - this is my least favoured option, since I think these fellows really drove supply wagons and similar, and would not be allowed to go near anything as technical as a pontoon.
One of these? - something else? I'd welcome some guidance on this - left to myself, I think I'd go for (2) above, but I really don't know.
I think class distinction would insist that the driver is, in fact, a specialist driver, so I am down to a shortlist of 3 possibilities, thus:
(1) pontoons are Engineering, which comes under the Artillery, so he can be an artillery driver, with grey-blue coat, faced dark blue.
(2) no they aren't - Engineering is a distinct department, and I believe that Engineering drivers wore pale grey faced black.
(3) or he could just be a general transport driver - grey-blue faced chestnut brown - this is my least favoured option, since I think these fellows really drove supply wagons and similar, and would not be allowed to go near anything as technical as a pontoon.
One of these? - something else? I'd welcome some guidance on this - left to myself, I think I'd go for (2) above, but I really don't know.
Tuesday, 8 February 2011
Home Brewed Flags - French 1er Leger
1804 pattern flag - for 1/72 scale, print the image 12mm high - if you prefer them overscale, 15 or 16 makes them clearer. Click on the image to get the big version, right click and save.
Sunday, 21 November 2010
My French Army - new pics
I recently got some new units based up, and am now in a position where, once I get a single battalion of foot dragoons ready for garrison duty, my French army has finally attained the organisation target I set myself about 30 years ago. Admittedly there has been a little scope creep over the years.
To celebrate this landmark (saying nothing at all about all the limbers which are still to be built and painted!) I thought it was time we had some more soldier pics on the blog - there's been an awful lot of words lately!
They are all set out in order, staff and artillery at the front, skirmishers at the rear. From left to right (as we see them), the columns are
King of Spain's Guard
Spanish line troops
Italian brigade
1st German brigade
2nd German brigade
6 French line brigades
Reserve artillery, plus garrison troops and artillery and engineers
Heavy cavalry
Light cavalry
With a couple of minor pieces of wargamer's licence, the army is a representative section of the Armee de Portugal with a rather more colourful reserve contingent, dating from around Spring 1812. The Emperor (who doesn't get out of The Cupboard very often) has obviously flown in from the frozen north to review the troops.
Hope you enjoy these - see how many figure manufacturers you can identify!



To celebrate this landmark (saying nothing at all about all the limbers which are still to be built and painted!) I thought it was time we had some more soldier pics on the blog - there's been an awful lot of words lately!
They are all set out in order, staff and artillery at the front, skirmishers at the rear. From left to right (as we see them), the columns are
King of Spain's Guard
Spanish line troops
Italian brigade
1st German brigade
2nd German brigade
6 French line brigades
Reserve artillery, plus garrison troops and artillery and engineers
Heavy cavalry
Light cavalry
With a couple of minor pieces of wargamer's licence, the army is a representative section of the Armee de Portugal with a rather more colourful reserve contingent, dating from around Spring 1812. The Emperor (who doesn't get out of The Cupboard very often) has obviously flown in from the frozen north to review the troops.
Hope you enjoy these - see how many figure manufacturers you can identify!



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