This is a vignette of the English commander, Robert Lord Willoughby, who’s noted in the accounts of Cravant for vigorously leading the successful attack over the bridge, possibly to directly engage the Scots.
Lord Willoughby was from an established landowning family
with estates in Lincolnshire and East Anglia and was already an experienced
captain in English armies in France by 1423. He can first be found in the
Soldier in Later Medieval England database fighting in the Agincourt
campaign. In 1417 he was a captain indentured to Humphrey duke of Gloucester’s
forces which captured Bayeux and Lisieux and in the same year was made a Knight
of the Garter. In 1424 he was at the English victory at Verneuil. He continued
for many years to campaign in France and was an integral part of the English
occupation, being closely involved in the Lancastrian government. In 1430 he
was present at the coronation of Henry VI in Paris and two years later he was
appointed King’s Lieutenant in Lower Normandy. His last active campaign appears
to be in 1437. He died at the age of sixty seven in 1452.
The figures are Perry AO Range – the Willougby figure is
from the French command pack and has had the cast-on heraldry removed. These
have been painted by me using my usual layered approach (no short cuts on
these). I’ve purposely used washes a little more on these, particularly on the
plate armour, inspired by Stuart’s excellent painting guide for his Landsknechts and I’m happy with the results. The flag was purchased from GMB.
The post is homemade and bears the arms of Cravant town, with a declaration for the town to surrender to the French king pinned to it, made from a thin foil tomato paste tube. Fencing is cut down Renedra, bent into a slight curve to match the round base. Original plan was to add this post to the Willoughby base, but then thought that having them separate was a better idea.
The post is homemade and bears the arms of Cravant town, with a declaration for the town to surrender to the French king pinned to it, made from a thin foil tomato paste tube. Fencing is cut down Renedra, bent into a slight curve to match the round base. Original plan was to add this post to the Willoughby base, but then thought that having them separate was a better idea.
If time allows I will make a gaming base for Lord
Willoughby, to lead the attack over the bridge… but that’s a “desirable to-do”
at this moment in time.
11 comments:
They look terrific, and the backstory adds some real depth.
Lovely vignettes!
Greate painting !!!
Best regards Michael
Fabulous as always
Very nice indeed, the washes have worked well. You're also consistently good at selecting figures and giving interaction to your bases. I like it !
Superb all round. The post is a lovely little touch and will be another little thing that makes your table stand out from the crowd. Roll on Salute.
Cheers,
Pat.
Super work on these!
Christopher
Fabulous!
Phil.
Stunning work, Simon. Can't wait to see the full set-up at Salute.
Best wishes
Giles
fantastic work mate, love the demand too!
cheers
matt
Great work. I am looking forward to seeing the display at Salute.
Post a Comment