Wednesday, 27 January 2016
Tuesday, 26 January 2016
Chamenkov's Army of Charles XII
Gardes Françaises
Steve Noon
King Louis XIV's Gardes Françaises assault the breach of a fortress in Flanders in the early 1700's.
FROM: Osprey Publishing's- Weapon 44, The Flintlock Musketier
Print from here
Sunday, 24 January 2016
Saturday, 23 January 2016
Friday, 22 January 2016
On TV tonight
BBC 2, 18:30 tonight: Michael Portillo on Great British Railway Journeys will 'visit' the Bloody Assizes in Taunton. Features a reenactment by the Taunton Garrison
Thursday, 21 January 2016
New Pendraken 10mm League of Augsburg
Here for the details. Thanks to Jurjen for the heads up. It's a popular range and I know a lot of people rate them. I'll have to indulge soon to see what they're like.
Wednesday, 20 January 2016
Het Rampjaar 1672
The game will be run in English and with English game materials, so open for anyone (capable of English )
by Jaap Boender
De Ark van Oost, Nijmegen, 13th of February 2016
De Ark van Oost, Nijmegen, 13th of February 2016
Introduction
This is the megagame of one of the darkest hours in Dutch history, when the country is being assailed from all sides. The people are beyond reason, the government is beyond hope, and the country is beyond rescue. Can the patricians of the Dutch Republic turn the situation around, or is the freedom that was so hard won destined to be lost again?The year is 1672, and the simmering rivalry between Louis XIV of France and the Republic has finally turned into all-out war. Mortally insulted by the attempts of the Republic (then ally of France) to keep him out of the Netherlands, the French king is bearing down on the Republic with an enormous army commanded by the most famous generals of the time.
More here
Sunday, 17 January 2016
Falkirk 1746
Today's anniversay - the 270th in fact THE BATTLE OF FALKIRK MUIR (1746)
The battle fought on the south muir of the town on 17th January 1746 was the last Jacobite triumph on the battlefield and the last time the famous Highland charge swept the clansmen to victory
The battle fought on the south muir of the town on 17th January 1746 was the last Jacobite triumph on the battlefield and the last time the famous Highland charge swept the clansmen to victory
Thursday, 14 January 2016
The Militia of The Monmouth Rebellion
The Militia of The Monmouth Rebellion Reveals just what a
well-organized, equipped, and creditable army they were, being capable
of drilling, marching and even fighting when called upon to do so.
In his political moves to expend his small regular army, James II denigrated his militia, saying they were not up to the job of defending the county, and implying that they were cowardly, ill-disciplined, poorly administrated, badly led, and prone to deserting.
James and his senior commanders, in a remarkable piece of political spin created a picture of an unreliable force, virtually useless on all occasions. This concocted interpretation has been repeated by generations of historians, but the problem is that it's just not true.
. 1 vol, 80 pgs 2013 UK, PARTIZAN PRESS
NEW-softcover, available late December 2015 ......$30.00 rct
In his political moves to expend his small regular army, James II denigrated his militia, saying they were not up to the job of defending the county, and implying that they were cowardly, ill-disciplined, poorly administrated, badly led, and prone to deserting.
James and his senior commanders, in a remarkable piece of political spin created a picture of an unreliable force, virtually useless on all occasions. This concocted interpretation has been repeated by generations of historians, but the problem is that it's just not true.
. 1 vol, 80 pgs 2013 UK, PARTIZAN PRESS
NEW-softcover, available late December 2015 ......$30.00 rct
Military Uniforms in the Netherlands 1752-1800
The Jassenboekje (the Military Coats Book) and the drawings of uniforms by Duncan Macalester Loup
Details hereTuesday, 12 January 2016
Portrait of Gerrit Sichterman
, Quartermaster General of the Cavalry,
Colonel of the Orange-Groningen Infantry, Commandant of Grave, Cornelis
Troost, , c. 1725
https://www.rijksmuseum.nl/en/collection/SK-A-3933
https://www.rijksmuseum.nl/en/collection/SK-A-3933
Sunday, 10 January 2016
The Turkish siege of Vienna
Artist |
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Title | The Turkish siege of Vienna | ||||
Date | 1750s |
Thursday, 7 January 2016
Wednesday, 6 January 2016
Bergen op Zoom 1747
Belegering Bergen op Zoom 1747 door Dirk Langendijk
Bron: Brabant-Collectie, Universiteit van Tilburg
From here
From here
Loudon's Highlanders (64th)
From the wiki
The great bravery of the 43rd Highlanders (later renumbered the 42nd) and the admirable service which they rendered at the Battle of Fontenoy in 1745, made the Government anxious to avail themselves still further of the military qualities of the Highlanders. Authority, therefore, was given to John Campbell, 4th Earl of Loudoun to raise another Highland regiment under the patronage of the noblemen, chiefs, and gentlemen of that part of the kingdom, whose sons and connections would be appointed officers. The regiment was raised at Inverness and Perth in August 1745.
The regiment fought at the Battle of Prestonpans in 1745 where they were defeated and many were taken prisoner but later released. Three companies of Loudon's Highlanders fought for the British Government against the Jacobites at the Battle of Culloden in 1746, where they were victorious, alongside one company of Highlanders from the 43rd Highlanders, otherwise known as the Black Watch.[1]
The regiment was ranked as the 64th Foot in 1747. It served at the siege of Bergen op Zoom where it distinguished itself and suffered over one thousand casualties out of a complement of 1,450. It was disbanded in 1748.[2]
The great bravery of the 43rd Highlanders (later renumbered the 42nd) and the admirable service which they rendered at the Battle of Fontenoy in 1745, made the Government anxious to avail themselves still further of the military qualities of the Highlanders. Authority, therefore, was given to John Campbell, 4th Earl of Loudoun to raise another Highland regiment under the patronage of the noblemen, chiefs, and gentlemen of that part of the kingdom, whose sons and connections would be appointed officers. The regiment was raised at Inverness and Perth in August 1745.
The regiment fought at the Battle of Prestonpans in 1745 where they were defeated and many were taken prisoner but later released. Three companies of Loudon's Highlanders fought for the British Government against the Jacobites at the Battle of Culloden in 1746, where they were victorious, alongside one company of Highlanders from the 43rd Highlanders, otherwise known as the Black Watch.[1]
The regiment was ranked as the 64th Foot in 1747. It served at the siege of Bergen op Zoom where it distinguished itself and suffered over one thousand casualties out of a complement of 1,450. It was disbanded in 1748.[2]
1747, John Campbell, 4th Earl of Loudoun
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John Reid (1721–1807) in 1746Read about the Tartan here |
Aftermath of the Monmouth Rebellion in 1685
Western Martyrology
Read about it here
Tuesday, 5 January 2016
The military effectiveness of the West Country militia at the time of the Monmouth rebellion
Thanks to Stephen Ede-Borrett for the heads up about this Free download by Chris Scott.
Monday, 4 January 2016
Sunday, 3 January 2016
Ralph Mitchard - musketeer in Devereux's
Me and my daughter when we were in the ECWS in about '86. Desert boots - seaman's socks and a buff coat mixed with a Kirstie Buckland Monmouth cap and newly authentic tube snapsack - as opposed to the hand bag variety of hessian bags so prevalent up till then. Regimental musket. I did eventually get me some Sarah Juniper shoes.
Colonel Alexander Popham (c.1595–1669)
- Date painted: c.1650
- Oil on canvas (?), 260 x 244 cm
- Collection: Royal Armouries Museum, Leeds
- wiki on Popham
English School, late 17th century
Portrait of a boy, full length, in a red coat with golden trim, holding a hat and a red carnation
Zoomable image here
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