"Serve I the first, I shall not be repaid;
Serve I the second, I harvest but hate.
Tricked I will be, if I serve still another,
Serve I the fourth, my conscience will bother.
I know the hero whom we'd serve without pay;
The one who permits us to steal our own way"
A tavern song, sung in Bohemian, in "The Harvest Goose", Laarden, 1688*
*******
Among the various Challenge Chamber entries, I've been painting a German mercenary regiment for my late seventeenth century project centred around the fictional Free-Flemish City of Laarden. I wanted a unit of German mercenaries who could easily take to the field on either side - Flemish, or French - and who knows, perhaps be of dubious loyalty to both, or either.
Casting the net to find for mercenary formations in the seventeenth century is not hard. There's a good choice of formations from the Thirty Years War, the Fronde, the Northern Wars and further to the East. I came across the name of Count Wilhelm Kinski, a colleague of Albrecht Wallenstein, the great Imperial military enterpriser and general in the Thirty Years War. Kinski - also spelled as Vilém Kinský or Vchynský - was a Bohemian soldier of fortune whose landed property passed to more reliable Hapsburg supporters after Wallenstein's murder in 1634.
I've also come across a reference to a regiment of Kinský serving in France in the Fronde in the 1650s, perhaps some distant relation. So, following a theme, I thought it was not unreasonable to place a regiment of the same name in late seventeenth century Flanders, as Bohemian "children of fortune" following the drum.
These 25mm figures are a bit of a mix. I've used Dixon Miniatures and Wargames Foundry for the soldiers. The camp followers are from Midlam Miniatures and Colonel Bill's. The cat and the dog (also following the drum, or the food) are from Warbases, and the barrels of beer and apples are from Hovels. The basket of bread is from Irregular Miniatures (and has finally found a base after about 30 years in the spares box).
I really struggled with finding good standards for German regiments which did not feature an Imperial Hapsburg eagle. Most of the German regiments in the Northern Wars between Denmark and Sweden seem to have adopted standards similar to one of the Northern belligerents, rather than something more personal to the colonel of the regiment.
I did come across a couple of standards which featured a pair of duelling knights on horseback, and used that design for the centre-piece of the standards, which I painted myself.
I tried to go for standards which looked sufficiently 'German', but which could also reasonably pass for use in either a French or Flemish army in the period.
As befits professional soldiers of fortune, I didn't bother with lots of green-stuff lace, feathers and ribbons. Such affectations are not for true masters of their craft - we can leave that to the French cavalry, or maybe French-fashion following Flemish cavaliers (#forthcoming). I thought that the beer barrels we possibly more in keeping with the mercenary lifestyle these 'gentlemen' would have enjoyed.
I fluffed up the bases a bit with tufts from WWS Scenics (which are very nice), and some static grass. I tried to get the 3mm bases (from Warbases) to be as neutral as possible, so went for a burnt umber tone for the edging, instead of black.
Ah, I'd almost forgotten - the points.... so 25 figures (one being two characters) in 25mm would give me 125 points, which is nicely symmetrical. No points for any 'Chamber' of Challenge XI, though - Count Kinský's men are not the sort to be tied down to any single location, after all, dear Challengers!
And because it's Sunday, and for all the collectors out there, here's the Collectible Character Card for the "Enemies and Allies of Laarden, 1688: The Challenge XI Collection", for Count Kinský and his "children of fortune'.
If you see them in the Grote Markt, dear friends, just trust me. Walk the other way...
(* I should mention that the chilling Bohemian song isn't mine. They're from a Strasburg-published text from 1650, which I took from page 472 of Fritz Redlich's "The German Military Enterpriser and His Workforce" (1964). Dr. Redlich's book has everything, and more, you'd ever want to know about seventeenth century mercenaries.)
stunning as always, your output rate this year has been very high and yet the quitly remains as epic as ever
ReplyDeleteThanks so much, Martin - very kind. Funny that however much I paint, it's never nearly as much as I'd hoped to do ! ;)
DeleteLovely looking solders of fortune Sydney and great backstory as always. You need to compile all of this stuff into a campaign guide.
ReplyDeleteThanks very much, Peter! Maybe one day, for the campaign guide .... fingers crossed!
DeleteSplendid looking soldiers of fortune, complete with their own mother courage! They look great and the flags are really nice too!
ReplyDeleteBest Iain
Thanks Iain! Chaps like this always brig their own 'Mother's Courage'!
DeleteAs usual in your work, a very impressive unit. Great Flags that add a lot of character to the pike block
ReplyDeleteThank you, Benito! The flags are always a bit of a pain to do, but I hope they're worth it in the end!!
DeleteWhat an awesome looking unit, and very different looking as well in the muted colour pallet. Along side your smooth brushwork it is a very lovely unit Sidney.
ReplyDeleteThanks very much, Byron. Finding the right colours was difficult. French are already in grey, Flemish in brown, Spanish in many strange colours - finding something neutral was.... tricky. Glad you liked it! Thanks again!!
DeleteSuch great stuff as always Sidney.
ReplyDeleteWhat size are the bases?
Thanks Greg. The infantry 'sleeves' are on two bases, each 60mm (frontage) x 40mm (depth). The central pike unit is on a large base of 60mm frontage and 80mm depth.
DeleteThe bases are a bit deeper because I like to mess around with base work, and I think a lot of seventeenth century pike and shot battalions were possibly deployed more deeply than we might first have thought, especially on the battlefield.
As for the pike base, I've simply got fed up with trying to store pikes easily! I've been basing a lot of the pikes on large units as they're easier to deploy on the table. Horses for course, I guess!!
Wow, these are exceptional.
ReplyDeleteThanks very much, Scott!!
DeleteFantastic looking unit Sir! Love 'em!
ReplyDeleteThanks so much, Ray - much appreciated!!
DeleteSidney dear chap these are bloomin' lovely.
ReplyDeleteYour attention to detail is exquisite.
I would not want these rascals anywhere near my town, but will happily admire them from afar, preferably the other side of an unfordable waterway.
A man after my own heart, Scrivs! Thank you! Though I doubt even the deep flowing River Laarde will prevent these rascals crossing if there's a stable-block and a hen-house to be plundered on the other bank ;)
DeleteGreat Stuff!
ReplyDeleteThanks very much, Adam!
DeleteBeautiful brushwork. The camp followers and standards all serve to bring this unit to life.
ReplyDeleteThanks Stuart! It was a bit of an odd shaped unit to do. I wanted the standards unfurled, and the camp followers to be doing things, but also didn't want to over-do it as its really supposed to be a fighting unit. Or, at least fighting is what they're paid to do...! Glad you liked them!
DeleteMarvellous stuff. That tan/ blue/ white combo is great.
ReplyDeleteThanks very much, Barks. I tried to make the battalion look "practical'. Not too many fancy colours, or feathers! It's always a bit of a balance to still make them 'pop'.
DeleteAnother impressive submission. I love the level of detail you always seem to manage to include in your work, Sidney.
ReplyDeleteMany thanks, Noel - really pleased you like them!
DeleteReally nice work on these.. I tried a Pike/Shotte force once and got one poorly unit finished before I gave up.. but this looks amazing when done right, like this one does, and those banners really set them off! I might have to dust off the models and figure out how to get them painted so nicely!
ReplyDeleteMany thanks indeed! I totally share your pain!! Unless you're going for very large battalions (40+ figures), pike & shot units can seem to be a bit of a juggle to get right. There's no right way to do it, but - if it helps - having a decent sized core of pikes and standards (regardless of the actual pike/shot ratio) is a fairly good start. Very best of luck, Sir, when you dust off your models!!
DeleteSuper work Sidney, so many great details, each base is like a little piece of Artwork 👍
ReplyDeleteRegards KenR
Thanks very much, Ken! It is easy to get a bit carried away! The cat, sneaking around one of the barrels, was a bit excessive :))
DeleteAnother great and inspirational unit with a wonderful story !
ReplyDeleteThanks very much, Jose!
DeleteFabulous looking troops Sidney! Your vignette like bases sets the scene perfectly and I love all the little stories you manage to cram into them.
ReplyDeleteCheers, Nick! Thank you very much - considering these chaps are supposed to be business-like, veteran soldiers, there is a lot of messing about on the bases. :) True "professionals"... LOL
ReplyDeleteIt's the quality I've come to expect, but I still don't know where you get the time; not just for the figures, but for the presentation and the whole package. Enviable skill level aside, it's a laudable achievement by any standard.
ReplyDeleteThanks very much indeed! Really pleased you like it - they took a bit of time, but, not too long. Quicker than cavalry... or highlanders!! (Have to look on the plus-side with these things!!)
DeleteThat is stunning clean work Sydney and those hand painted banners are marvelous!
ReplyDeleteChristopher
Thanks very much, Christopher! The banners are a bit.... well, don't look TOO closely at one of the horses :))
Delete