It has been a long time since my last update. I guess Nashcon kind of took it out of me, but I have been slowly painting. Lots of small projects have kept me busy, like re-basing some of my 25mm Persians and Macedonians so that I can give the Fields of Glory rules a try. Grad school is also getting very serious now, and with working a full time job and going to school my time for painting has shrunk dramatically. School didn't keep me from dreaming however and I got a wonderful Eureka Early Samurai army from a fellow Fanatici and have been slowly whittling away at it. This army required much more research than usual, because I just didn't feel comfortable starting until I had a better understanding of the period and more specifically the armor and all of it's intricacies. I used several books on the samurai as a guide, but relied most heavily on the Heiji Scroll, a period illustration of a raid led by Minamoto no Yoshitomo, a relative of Minamoto no Yoritomo, who would eventually become the first Shogun of Japan and establish the Kamakura shogunate. Here is a link to a wonderful interactive website for the scroll: http://www.bowdoin.edu/~ktravers/projects/heijiscroll/viewer.html
The horses have lots of tassels which I assume served as a protection from arrows as well as decoration. The bridle is slightly different from the western design as their is no strap over the nose connected to the bit. I gave some of the samurai patterned robes, but also a lot of just plain utilitarian robes, or ones with a subtle woven pattern that simply would be too difficult to try and paint at this scale.
The command stand from the back
One of the strange phenomenons of Japanese warfare was the class of warrior monks. Many sons of noble Japanese families populated the Buddhist temples and so it was natural for them to have military training. There are also many elements of Bushido (the way of the warrior) which are closely related to Buddhist ideology. Warrior monks were often indistinguishable from regular samurai, but often wore a white head cloth or white robe as a sign of their religion. At one point rival warrior Buddhist monks almost destroyed the capital city of Kyoto.
Nice work, David.
ReplyDeleteI actually just picked up a Samurai army myself - but also know very little about the period. So they'll probably be a bit of a "next year" project - once I've had some time to read up on how to paint these guys!
If I read this right ,thats 15mm. In that case thats great work. I am interssted in martial arts wargaming and Japanese history given what I have read etc what you have done looks quite good although your generals helmet does look like later period.
ReplyDeleteThankyou for putting this on the net.
I also have some old minfigs samurai to re paint and I hope I can do half as well as you have done.
Lewis
These are indeed 15mm Eureka figures. You are absolutely correct about the general's helmet, but I don't mind a bit of historical creativity for the sake of ease of play. It certainly does make him easy to identify! The Heiji scroll is a wonderful reference (link above in army description) for Kamakura period uniforms.
ReplyDeleteDavid
I like pic number one particularly. Could I use that one as my appendix header illo? It so happens that the last army list in the appendix is a Kamakura Japan list (the only Japanese list anyone did up for us, the game designers; I don't do Japanese or Oriental armies myself; thus my lack of suitable pics for the period/locale)....
ReplyDeleteDoug
Doug. That would be fine. Do you need me to email you a copy, or can you just grab it from the site?
ReplyDeleteDavid
I "grabbed" it. But I would like to email you a PDF of the rules, so that you can see how I used your pic....
ReplyDeleteDoug
cool. try dleecrenshaw@aol.com
ReplyDeleteFabulous work on these! Truly impressive.
ReplyDelete