Supercilius Maximus | 26 Nov 2015 3:44 p.m. PST |
Anyone know which manufacturers' products would be suitable for the "pre-hussar" era in Polish history? A friend is looking to produce a FoG:R Early Polish army covering the 1500-1560 period. |
dwight shrute | 26 Nov 2015 3:45 p.m. PST |
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vexillia | 26 Nov 2015 3:51 p.m. PST |
In 15 mm this range may help with the earlier part of this period – bit.ly/1R9k9Pg
-- Martin Stephenson Vexillia: Wargames Miniatures & Accessories Shop | Rules | eBay | Twitter |
Swampster | 26 Nov 2015 4:57 p.m. PST |
In 15mm, Serbian style hussars as shown on the Battle of Orsha painting (i.e. not the winged type), can be bought from various people. I've just painted some from QR Miniatures which are nice. They are in their late 16th century range but they are suitable for earlier.
is a good guide for the Poles. Some of the infantry look like armoured Swiss would do. |
GamesPoet | 26 Nov 2015 8:48 p.m. PST |
Where can folks see a close up of that painting? |
Swampster | 27 Nov 2015 12:55 a.m. PST |
A search for 'battle of Orsha' should give a lot of links to close ups and zoomable versions. The Wikipedia article link has a fairly good one. |
GamesPoet | 27 Nov 2015 6:33 a.m. PST |
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Kadrinazi | 27 Nov 2015 12:19 p.m. PST |
Plenty of close up of this painting: link |
Supercilius Maximus | 28 Nov 2015 5:05 a.m. PST |
Thanks to everybody who has contributed – and yes, sorry, I should have said it was 15mm figures my mate is interested in. So, it sounds like a lot of generic Late Mediaeval/Early Renaissance figures would be ok for everyone except the light cavalry, who in turn could be represented by generic figures from earlier/later East European ranges. Yes? In the painting of the Battle of Orsha, am I right in thinking that the Poles are coming from the right and the Russians from the left? The reason I'm in doubt is because the guys who appear to be the Poles seem to have St George's crosses on their lance pennants, which I would have thought was more of a Russian thing. |
Swampster | 28 Nov 2015 9:03 a.m. PST |
PDF link is a pretty good read about the painting and battle. Lots more close ups though mostly in b&w. Some parts not shown here link are covered in the pdf. The Poles and Lithuanians are indeed carrying St George pennants. A cluster of hussars are around a Polish flag of eagle on red. The other flags, which look rather green, are apparently blue Lithuanian flags. The bunch of horsemen in the foreground with bows would thus be native Lithuanians dressed similarly to the Polish whereas those in the extreme background in white caps are Tatars in Lithuanian service. Some earlier East European light cavalry could be of use but I wouldn't go too early. Essex does a variety of Serbian, Hungarian, Wallachian and Lithuanian cavalry in their EMED range. Irregular have some too – there can be some gems in the Irregular range so these may be okay. I've mentioned the figures from the QR range. Some of the By Fire and Sword figures may be of use though holsters may need removing. There are also figures from various other ranges – Minifigs, Roundway, 15mm.co.uk for instance. I think the one most like the painting are the QR figures amd Essex's Polish-Serbians. The knights may well have their uniformity exaggerated. Having only some in plate barding probably wouldn't go amiss and the foot in plate seem to be wearing tournament armour which may be an exaggeration too. |
Supercilius Maximus | 29 Nov 2015 7:50 a.m. PST |
Thanks, Swampster. (Are you the same "Swampster" from the [very] old "General de Brigade Forum"?) |
Swampster | 29 Nov 2015 10:39 a.m. PST |
That's me :) A brief foray into the wicked world of Napoleonics before returning to my true love of the ancient and medieval. |
Supercilius Maximus | 30 Nov 2015 12:35 p.m. PST |
Always enjoyed your posts on there – thanks for your help here. |