Thursday, 25 June 2009
Horse artillery
Artillery seems to have been little used in the First Carlist War, largely due to the nature of the terrain and a lack of draught animals. Larger guns were difficult to move around the mountains of northern Spain and both sides quickly realised that smaller calibre guns, capable of being carried on the backs of mules, would be the most viable form of artillery support. This required a certain amount of re-training and re-equipping the artillery with mountain guns, usually 6 or 8 pounders and howitzers.
The regular army consisted of Guard, foot and horse artillery units. The horse artillery had a rather flamboyant uniform with a tapering shako and a coatee with red facings and yellow grenades on the collar and turbacks. The horse artillery element seems to have expanded to 12 batteries during the war. The Isabelinos had the edge over the Carlists in terms of artillery support, as the latter had to rely mainly on capturing guns and di not have access to the ready supplies of ammunition that the Isabelinos had. But both sides never really gave full support to their artillery - it was seen as a means of providing some support to the infantry and never an offensive arm in its own right.
These Perry figures have a British 6-pounder gun. I painted the gun with the new Foundry "British Blue Grey" palette, from their "authentic" Napoleonic range.
Painted April 2009.
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9 comments:
lovely work Giles, I wasn't aware of the mule packed guns.
cheers
matt
Ooh, ooh makes me want to paint a cannon!
super painted figs; the carlist wars looks like an interesting period to wargame.
-- Allan
Sorry, my previous comment was riddled with typos so I deleted it.
What I was TRYING to say is it looks like the inclusion of other periods in your blog has supercharged you Giles! More posts, more painted figures. Very enjoyable to see all your recent posts.
Thanks,
AJ
There are days I wish I had your talent and time.
Wonderful stuff (apart from the shakos), you do real justice to the figs.
Any comments on the Blue Grey? You might have noticed that Foundry has just released some new sets especially for artillery pieces - oh dear...
Cheers
SG
Giles,
Do Eureka Miniatures have a distributor in the Uk that you know of?
Theo
Giles,
Ooops! Found them at "Fighting 15s"!
Theo
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