Friday 3 December 2021

Meanderings

 


I’ve been busier that the blog would suggest. A weekend at Salute, TORM and the neighbouring Artisan and Re-enactors market. First time at Salute. 

 


Highlights were Bad Squiddo’s massive and excellently stand and friendly in-house painter, seeing and buying a fraction of Empress’ range figures at last, some French Indochina paratroops, and Project Fear, a witty, Steve Bell-esque Brexit game. As well as the paras, it was a good day for keeping the business afloat – Perrys, Debris of War and Bad Squiddo figures and lots of reading material. A good haul. No photos as they are squirreled away for my and family “surprise” Christmas presents. And then the next day off to the two markets - a doublet on order and good to see Pretender to the Throne and Tudor Tailor

 



I’ve also been working lots of side and half-completed projects. For Towton some buildings for Lead farm are progressing slowly, a TNH light tank for Operation Countenance 1941, and some skeletons for my nephew. More on some of these in later posts, hopefully. 

 

But to break the dry spell, and to keep it on topic, I thought I should post a book recommendation, Blood and Roses by Helen Castor. I’ve read an abridged collection of the Paston Letters before, but Castor weaves the family story into the wider history of 15th Century. In doing so, she shows how the local, personal and national and even the petty and the strategic, clothes shopping, law and status are all intertwined. It brings the period to life because of the character, motives and even voices of the family, their friends and foes. It also emphasizes the arbitrary and personal nature of late medieval politics and life in England. It also referenced the Stonor Papers, a gentry family local to me. These are an excellent albeit smaller set of texts, which draw in other Bucks/Oxfordshire families too, helpful to another much stalled project I have in mind, a gazetteer of the two counties’ families in the WoRs. 

 

 

Monday 30 August 2021

WIP - Chopping up landsknecht

I've been doing a lot of bits and pieces recently but nothing very WoRs specific and nothing finished but bored one evening I thought I would do something quick and easy - reposition some of the Pro Gloria/Warlord plastic landsknect. The original poses have alwys been a bit off kilter, so I thought I would cut and move the torsos in to a more natural stance.
In the end I did more than I planned, kitbashing them with some Perry's, Warlord ECW, even the odd Warhammer Empire Guards (I think) and a bit of greenstuff. I think they are now more animate, and aggressive, with pikes levelled.
Now I just need to prep and paint them and work out what campaign they are for. Sorry the photos are so bad. These are the best of a few attempts.

Wednesday 26 May 2021

Crossing Cock Beck

A small scene of Lancastarians fleeing the battle across the infamous Cock Beck on the flank of the field. Seeing it for real last summer, struck me what a hard route out it was. And made me think of making this base. It shows some Percy and a Somerset retainer pursued by Sir Henry Vavasour and an anonoumous light cavalry man. See my posting on the battlefield for more on the landscape and Vavasour. I started this thinking I would enter Winston's WoRs vignette competition on LEF, but I never got past undercoating the figures before the cloase date. I'm a very slow worker, and the liquid water added a new dimension too. But happy with the dynamism and the new techniques I used.

Monday 18 January 2021

Siege of St Andrews - 1546-1547

A friend asked me to paint a few WoRs figures for him. Instead I decided to go off piste, again, and came up a vignette of the Siege of St Andrew's castle, 1546-47, given his links to the city. It took most of 2020 to complete but finally done.

The Story of the Siege

The Rough Wooing isn't my historical patch but the siege include all the political elements - religion, court power struggles, dynastic marriage plans, and international relations, with French and English involvement. 

The siege began when a number of Protestant lairds took the castle and killed its owner, Cardinal Beaton, in response to his execution of a Protestant preacher, George Wishart. Beaton's body was hung from the castle ramparts.

The Earl of Arran's coat of arms

Earl of Arran, the Scottish Regent, started a siege of the castle in late 1546 but the initial campaign had little impact and a truce and negotiations followed English threats to come in aid of the besieged protestants. There then followed a period of talks, intermittent English naval forays; and the death of Henry VIII, and the regular back and forth of John Knox, latter founder of Scotland's Presbyterian Church, as the as garrison's chaplain. English naval assistance was unsuccessful but in April 1547, Henry II of France sent aid to the besiegers, under the command of Italian mercenary, Leone Strozzi. After ineffectual bombardments from French ships, the plague-ridden garrison, fell to an effective, well-organised artillery bombardment on 30 July. Many of the defenders were imprisoned in France, and some ended up on war gallies, including Knox. Any Scottish victory overshadowed the next year, with their major defeat at Pinkie.

Leone Strozzi



Strozzi's coat of arms

So to the figures. There are two stands, One a command with Strozzi and Arran plus standard bearers and a Gallowglass for extra character. The other, two Scottish hand gunners, a Landsknecht and French crossbow man. 


I’m not sure how well executed they are, and I find the paint finishes lacking contrast but I like the fact, unlike the WoRs, there was a chance to mix it up with a variety of styles and costumes. The figures use virtually all of the makes I have - Perry, Steelfist dollies, Warlord and even some Warhammer Imperial Guard arms and a Dixon sword. And a bit of green stuff.


I do recommend a visit to the Castle and St Andrews if you ever get a chance.

Saturday 9 January 2021

Visit to Towton Battlefield

We managed to visit North Yorkshire this summer, during the lulls between lock-downs. The first day trip was to Towton battlefield.

We walked the battlefield, saw Saxton Church, the Crooked Billet and St Mary's Chapel. And also  saw Hazlewood Castle, across the beck, home to Sir Henry Vavasour (1421/30-1499), who according to some sources fought on the Yorkist side with Warwick, even though based in a Lancastrian heartland and possibly a Percy retainer.

Sir Henry is buried in the castle's chapel,

    "By the door lyes a blue marble about 2 yards and i long, escocheoned at corners thus: viz. Vavasour     and Gascoigne impaled. On the inscription plate this epitaph, viz. + Orate pro animabus domini             Henrici Vavasour militis, qui obiit ....die mentis .... anno Domini m0 cccc0 x'cviij0. (?) et [Johanna         consortia snce, quce xvij die Septembris, anno Domini m0 cccc" lxij0 (?) decessit;omniumque             fidelium defunctorum, ut requiescant in pace."  Torre's Archdeaconry of York. c 1754, 218.


The Vavasour coat of arm. And possibly the Gascoigne one it was impaled with.


 

 

 

According to one story,  the family heard the battle, 2/3rds of a mile away whilst at  Mass. It was Palm Sunday after all. And another, that Edward IV took quick refreshment in the Castle after the battle before moving on to York.

Thoughts from the visit?  

I've always found visiting battlefields and other sites associated with trauma and death a mixed and tad ghoulish experience and this time no different. But it is a quiet, still place, with not glorification, and no commercialisation.

Visiting the site did solidify the geography, especially the ascents, descents and plateau, in my mind. The long, wet slog up from Ferrybridge to the Towton plateau in snow and cold weather must have been tiring, grim and anxious for the Yorkists. And the short, sharp drop from the salient to the beck and the routes north  for the Lancastarians in rout even worse. Even on a summer day, the plateau is noticeably higher and exposed. I imagine it was less open and uniform at the time, however. 

And St Mary's Chapel, at Lead, on the left flank, is a hidden gem. It is the only extant remnant of Lead Manor and village, which again, the story goes, Edward may have stayed in the night before the battle. 

I hope to create a figure of Vavasour, Lead Chapel and if possible the retreat towards the beck.