Thursday 19 January 2023

From PeterD 28mm Attaccotti (67 points)


Hey look Curt I used the watered down white glue to stick down my scree before photos this time! 


This week I have a unit of 12 Attacotti fanatics as foes for my Late Romans in Britain.  The Attacotti are a shadowy Celtic people who were most likely based in the Western Isles of Scotland.  The historian Ammianus says that they took part in the Barbarian Conspiracy of 367 (along with Picts, Scots-Irish, Saxons, Franks and Roman deserters).  Later the Notitia Dignitatum lists Attacotti Auxilia Palatina units among both the Eastern and Western Empire armies and there is a funeral dedication in Illyricum to one of these Auxiliaria soldiers.  The writings of St Jerome mention Attacotti, who are at one point he describes as being cannibals. 

Tail end Diarmaid in the blue hood turned out to be a bit needy.  His shield arm kept requiring reglueing, including just before photo time.  

In war-gaming terms, the Attacotti are typically lumped in as an option for fanatical war bands in the Scots-Irish list. I've modelled them mainly using Gripping Beast plastic Picts with add ons from GB Irish and Victrix Late Romans sets.  Gripping Beast put out plastic box sets for Irish, Picts and Welsh which all have a common set of torsos with differing heads, weapons and shields.  For instance the Picts get Emperor Palpatine hoods, crossbows and oddly shaped shields.  The Irish get bare heads and round shields and I don't what the Leek lovers get as I haven't bought a box!  A couple of figures have wrap around cloaks from the Victrix Romans.  There are also two metal Gripping Beast figures, the horn blower and standard bearer.

I will add unit tables across the back of the bases shortly.  Still tinkering with font and colour options.

Most of my Scots-Irish have beigish tunics to represent plain wool, but I've painted my Attacotti in an indigo blue for easy identification (they're in blue they must be fanatics).  I've no historical basis for this, but the seam of historical ore that I am mining is pretty thin at best. This summer I read a novel by Adrian Goldsworthy (better know as a very good Roman historian) about the Usipi .  These were Germanic auxilaries in the Flavian era who revolted and turned cannibal and pirate in the Irish Sea.  Goldsmith has them wearing black, which I lightened to being an indigo.

There's some pretty good motion in some of the plastic figures and lots of head and arm combinations to add variety.

I had some fun trying out plaids and stripes on the cloaks and added freehand shields and a flag.  I am a little annoyed with myself on the flag as I had to a point that I was happy with it and decided to add a wash for texture.  Unfortunately I rushed the timing and the design bled a bit under the wash.

Seamus on the right has one of the Victrix cloaks round his torso, as does Feargal in the middle of the left base..

As Challenge veterans will remember (and Curt will remind them).I am firmly in the free hand shields over transfers camp.  Some folks seem to get truly wonderful results from transfers (BenF) but I can't put a sticky label on a freezer container or a name badge to save my life.  And a reply enjoy researching and painting the shields.  I timed myself this week and it took me 45 minutes to go from beige base coat and plain paper to 11 shields plus the flag, including some time searching Google images.  It is not a matter of a fine eye as my handwriting's unreadable and I can't draw worth beans.  Simple geometric designs and focusing on getting the overall feel right are way more important than precision.  In my younger days I would paint a variety of shield backgrounds for each unit, but I've long since changed to a uniform background so as to identify units with varied designs.

No theme points for me this time, but 12 28mm foot figures should be good for 60 points which also count for the Carausius Emperor of Britain Side duel.

From TeemuL: What a nice and colourful lot from you, Peter! And thanks for the brief history lesson, I would have said Attaccotti is some kind of Italian food, but I do make errors from time to time... I'm not doing an error for granting you some extra points for those hand painted shields and flag. I'm quite sure there are some beards and mustaches, too. Very nice, and the basing looks good, too.

25 comments:

  1. A very lively bunch of fanatics there! Great work!

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  2. Well, I have to say I've never seen a nicer bunch of Scottish cannibals. Wonderful variation in poses/clothes with your kit-bashing, Peter. I think the shields look terrific (and I thank you in advance for not having hand-vac the table free of kitty litter with these bases). Great work, Peter!

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    1. Thanks very much Curt. You know I like to give you things to fuss over in the man shed so I'm sure I can shed some bits of debris next time.

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  3. I like the blend of kits here- really unique looking unit.

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    1. Thanks Rob, mixing and matching is the joy of the modern plastic kits.

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  4. Thanks for you kind words Teemu. I wouldn't suggest eating any food prepared Ala Attacotti.

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  5. Great job Peter. Well done on the shields, and the cloaks too. Your brushwork is getting stronger all the time.

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  6. FFS - Fantastic Fanatic Scots :-)

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  7. Loving those Peter, they look great

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  8. These guys look rough and tough. Nice work on their look.

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    1. Thanks Sylvain. You'll get to see them on table tomorrow night from the looks of things.

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  9. They are great, I like how you combined different makes to compose your unit, and the shield and the colour scheme really bind them together without detracting from the variety. Excellent work!

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    1. Thanks very much. They are really about 95% GB, but I do like the mixing and matching. A unified colour palette is maybe less historic, but work swell on table.

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  10. Nice work Peter - +1 for freehand shields - after several partial successes with transfers, I'm with you on this!

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    1. Thanks Pete. For me the problem with transfers is you often need to get them on perfectly. Plus it’s easy to wipe off and start again when you paint them.

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