Showing posts with label Russian Napoleonic. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Russian Napoleonic. Show all posts

Tuesday, 28 October 2025

Odds and Ends...

With no volume of figures to work on I have been working on a number of odds and ends that have been laying around for a while.

First up are some Austrian Napoleonic cavalry. The riders are made up from a number of bits left over from the units I built earlier this year plus some spare horses from the Prussian generals project. The two cuirassier figures - one in a fatigue cap and the other with bandaged head (taken from the French FPW command set) - will make useful ADCs.



The three chevauxleger figures also use the excess horses to expand the Hohenzollen Chevauxleger Regiment completed in January. These three have the helmet without a crest (because I had used the crested helmets earlier. I have been used to up grade an existing six figure to a nine figure unit.



The sixth figure, a Russian mounted jager officer, is also a byproduct of the Prussian generals project. He will make a good brigadier or courier.


There are a few other bits and pieces in the bits box that will pass across the painting table in the next week or so.

Sunday, 29 December 2024

Generals

Fresh off the painting table are two more Swedish Napoleonic generals (converted from Russians)...





And one Russian general.




This completes the Swedish project started in November 2021. Maybe now they will make it to the table.

Saturday, 25 March 2023

Landwehr Battalion, Regiment Froon, No 54

Before my brief painting hiatus I started work on thus unit, completing 24 figures before the lead pile flattened. With the arrival of the last parcels the remaining 12 figures could join the unit.

It seems that in 1813 and 1814 the Austrian military establishment swelled considerably. Where regiments had previously counted only two field battalions, they expanded to three or four battalions. Often the fourth battalion was a Landwehr battalion. So this is what I have done here, established a Landwehr battalion in Regiment Froon.



Also completed with the arrival of the two parcels were two stands of the Second Battalion of the Russian Lieb Grenadiers that suffered from a failure to order enough command sprues with my previous order.




Tuesday, 14 February 2023

The Pavlovsky Grenadiers

Arguably the unit best known to wargamers in the Russian Napoleonic army is the Pavlovsky Grenadiers and it is largely because of their headgear - they wore the eighteenth century mitre caps with a brass front plate instead of the kiwer. I had always thought that they had a long and distinguished period of service and wore that cap out of some sort of honour that probably stretched back to Peter the Great. But no, their origin was much shorter, being formed from two battalions of the Moscow grenadiers in 1796. They participated in almost every major event that the Russian Army was involved in during the Revolutionary and Napoleonic Wars, including the expedition to Holland in 1799, the Hanover Expedition, the battles in Poland in the 1806-7 campaign, making a name for themselves at Eylau, where were simultaneously attacked front an rear by French cavalry and at Friedland where they were raked by French gunfire but held their ground.

They were in the thick of things in 1812 and made their name at the Battle of Klyastitsy where Wittgenstein was surprised by Oudinot on 30 July. The following day the Russians turned to the attack and drove the French back. Unable to halt the advance Oudinot ordered his troops back across the Nishcha River and to burn the only bridge, but the 2nd Battalion of the Pavlovskys stormed across the burning bridge and routed the French, as depicted in this painting by Peter Hess.

The regiment was heavily engaged at Borodino, repulsing the initial assault by the French V Corps around the village of Utitska. In November 1812, for is service in the Patriotic War, the regiment was given the title Pavlovsky Life-Guard Regiment and served as a part of the Imperial Guard at Leipzig, in the Turkish War of 1828-29, the Polish Revolts of 1831 and 1862-3, the Russo-Turkish War of 1877 and the Great War. The mitre caps were retained as a part of their ceremonial uniform, complete with the bullet holes from the regiment’s Napoleonic exploits, until the very end.

Pavlovsky Grenadiers are the butt of many jokes in our group. This is mainly because part of the group’s collection is made up of old Minifigs and Hinchliffe figures originally owned by one of group founders, my dear departed friend Jim Shaw. He collected his vast armies back in the 1970s and it would be fair to say that in those days information on the organisation of the Russian Napoleonic army was hard to come by. If you were lucky a magazine like Military Modelling, Airfix or Tradition would have a snippet of detail once every two or three years. So Jim was working blind with organisation of the Pavlovsky regiment and he recruited five battalions of them - there were only ever three and of those only two ever took the field, the third remaining in garrison in St Petersburg. Whenever these figures make to the table there are the inevitable jokes about the Pavlovsky Division.

When I decided to do a brigade of grenadiers for my army, I just had to add the Pavlovsky Regiment. I had owned two battalions of them  before in my Hinchliffe army collected in the 1970s and sold in the 1990s. Until fairly recently every manufacturer made the figures with the tall grenadier mitre, but when the Soviet archives were opened new research showed that this was not the standard headgear for the regiment. Traditionally the Russian grenadier regiments consisted of three battalions, one grenadier and two fusilier battalions. In 1810 the grenadiers were restructured  and the battalions were formed of one grenadier and three fusilier companies. The fusiliers wore a shorter version of the mitre. All grenadiers were supposed to turn in their mitre caps in 1805 for the 1803 shako with that ridiculously large bottle brush plume, but true to Russian procurement capacity of the time the Pavlovskys still wore their mitres in 1807 and for their heroic efforts at Friedland the Tsar permitted them to retain their mitres.

Both battalions, the First the left and the Third on the right.

According to the Perrys each of the fusilier companies carried a standard as I have done here. One of the companies in the First battalion carries the colonel’s colour the rest are the regimental colours. 






And cyclone Gabrielle? Well it is still raging around the country, although I suspect the worst has past for Auckland. The rain has abated, but the wind is still strong. We weren’t badly hit. Our only noticeable damage was to four pots of runner beans that got blown over in a very heavy gust. 


Hopefully they can be recovered (apart from the broken pot) because they have been particularly productive plants. Other places around the country aren’t so lucky though and there is a lot of cleaning up.




Monday, 6 February 2023

The Lieb Grenadier Regiment

Presented here is the latest in the Russian Napoleonic grenadiers, the First Battalion, Lieb Grenadier Regiment.




The second battalion is almost formed, but the battalion command are not available due to a purchasing error - only one command set was ordered instead of two. The battalion command will not be joining the battalion now until early-March.

Also completed are a batch of mounted officers (left to right), a mounted divisional officer (in the cap, whose missing horse arrived with the last order) with a dragoon escort, a mounted brigadier for the grenadiers, and a single dragoon trooper who will serve as a courier.





Sunday, 15 January 2023

St Petersburg Grenadier Regiment

Oh dear…another expansion project…

After completing the Russian cavalry it occurred to me that I have more regiments of cavalry than I have battalions of infantry. Now I know that I did the cavalry expansion simply to give variety, but I figured there was a need to correct the imbalance a little.

One of the features of the Russian army, and the Austrian army for that matter, was their use of grenadier and combined grenadier divisions. In general terms grenadier divisions were formed from the grenadier regiments, but the structure of the combined grenadiers is always confused me. A quick search on the internet turned up an explanation from by von Peter Himself, whose research I accept without question, that they were formed by combining the grenadier and carabinier companies from the depot (second) battalions of the musketeer and jäger regiments (only the first and third battalions served in the field) - if this is proved wrong it’s all Peter’s fault. 

When a local retailer had the Perry plastics on sale I snapped up a couple of boxes and decided to make up some grenadier regiments. With the purchase of a couple of extra plastic command sets and an eight metal figures, I can build four battalions from those two boxes. I will add a couple of metal grenadier battalions to make this force six battalions strong.

The creation of the plastic grenadiers did cause some problems in that the boxed set does not provide enough grenadier heads, only one third of the number needed. Fortunately I had the foresight to keep the spare heads of the horse jägers when I was working on the Russian cavalry and with a bit of work with the scalpel and plastic cement was able to cut the plume from the cavalry head and affix it to the Kiwer…et voila a grenadier head…and I had just enough (with two to spare) of the horse jäger plumes to do the whole two boxes and the commands.


This is the first regiment of that expansion…although the command stands are not quite finished…there are still two metal figures to add to each battalion that are still enroute from Nottingham.








Thursday, 15 December 2022

Russian Horse Artillery

These two horse batteries complete the great Allied cavalry expansion.







These two, along with all the other recent Allied cavalry acquisitions, will appear in Sunday’s game.




Where to next? Well it’s back to North America to finish off the last remaining unit of the American AWI collection.

Monday, 12 December 2022

Tiraspol Mounted Jäger Regiment

With this unit of mounted jägers the great Allied cavalry expansion is almost completed…for now (there may yet be some Prussian landwehr cavalry and another regiment of cuirassiers). At the same time I do not see the need to expand the Russian cavalry since there are now two cuirassier, five dragoon, two mounted jäger, one hussar, one uhlan and four Cossack regiments in the collection - I figure that gives me enough variety for scenarios.





Also completed are three command bases, two brigadiers…

…and a higher command base…although the senior officer here is still waiting for a horse.

Here is the whole Mounted Jäger brigade

All of this horse flesh, plastic and metal, is ready to hit the gaming table in a large all cavalry fight this weekend.