Napoleon got his start, of course, not in the infantry or in the cavalry, but in the artillery. And so we come to the first artillery division of my 25mm Napoleonic French collection; the Guard Artillery.
The guns were one of the most formidible parts of the Napoleonic army, not just because of the damage they caused but also the damage they had on morale. Artillery pieces were capable of forcing men to ground and, when working in conjuction with cavalry, capable of punishing infantry in square to a horrifying degree. The guns are each manned by five gunners, all wearing the uniform of the Guard artillery. Like with my cavalry and infantry, each gun comes on a movement tray for ease of movement and appeal to the eye!
As I mentioned in an earlier post, I enjoy an army most when it has the supporting elements that an army really needs. This is most apparent in the artillery, where I have almost as many men manning the caissons and limbers than the guns themselves! Somehow cannon just don't look proper without their support.
In this case it took a conversion to get the limbers and caisson for the Guard to match the actual gunners. Old Glory has no Guard limbers, and so I had to go about a little head swap, taking the bearskin-wearing heads from spare artillery gunners and putting them on the bodies of the regular limber riders. To the left you can see the poor donors, as well as the original heads; I am trying to think if I have any need for a pile of shako-wearing French heads for my Russian army! To the right you can see the limbers right after the head swap, pre-painting, as they sat on the workbench waiting to be finished.
All of the Guard Artillery is from Old Glory 25mm.
Sunday, March 16, 2008
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4 comments:
Sorry you went to all the trouble with the head swaps on the limber outriders. Guard artillery outriders wore shakos.
D'oh!
Don't feel bad. I just did the Regiment of Orange in 1/72 at a figure ration of 1-30. That came to 54 figures plus 14 casualty figures. I head swapped most of them with Dutch shako heads, only to find out they wore French shakos with cords. I now have to re-head swap them all. Yikes!
I was wondering why you have painted your Guard Foot Artillery with red over white plumes? The plumes should be red for Other Ranks and Officers to the rank of Major. The Colonel, Major and all staff wore white plumes.
Also you appear to have an officer with pointed lapels a la chassuer when they should be square cut and also blue.
The Artillery Train of the Guard were grey short coats faced dark blue with pewter buttons and wore shakos.
For more information on the uniforsm go to
www.footartillery.googlepages.com
Thanks
Anthony
Oh yeah the bearskin should have a peak and chinscales (chin chains nver worn ) and a YELLOW flaming grenade on the rear patch. This was gold for officers and NCOs. I notice yours are white like the Grenadiers a Pied. Maybe a quick dan with the painbrush to make em the right colour?
Oooff, I hadn't seen these posts!
Oh man... well. I suck.
I'll give it a look and maybe go back and rework these guys.
Thanks for the... well, advice I suppose:)
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