Roman 54mm Project Update
Three 54mm Roman legions formed up in the Quincunx formation |
I have been busy basing a lot of the 54mm Punic Wars figures that I painted so that I would not face the day when I would have to base hundreds of figures. In other words, it was time to stop putting off the unpleasant part of painting and assembling war game armies: the basing of figures. Doing a few at a time is no big deal, but when I let the number of unbased figures accumulate, then an easy task turns into drudgery. Yuck!
So I have painted three Republican Roman legions so far. I finished the third legion last week. My legions consists of 32-figure Hastatii, Princeps, Triarii and 16-figure Velites (light skirmishers). That adds up to 112 figures per legion and they all needed to be based. I put the figures on 40mm round bases and then use movement trays from Litko (4 figures wide by 2 rows deep = 8 figures per stand). Four movement trays of 8 figures equal the 32 figures in the principal units in the legion.
The Romans would often deploy their maniples into staggered formations of three battle lines. I do not subdivide my units into maniples because this is too granular for the type of game and rules that I intend to use in my convention games next year. The Velites (light troops) would be out in front of the main mass of formed units with Hastatii in the front row, the Princeps in the second row, and the veteran Triarii forming the third and final row in the formation.
Apparently this formation must have worked for the Romans, but it seems that the open lanes in the battle lines would be a major weakness as it would allow enemy troops to move into the gaps of the battle line. I suppose that the Velites would retire through the gaps and maybe the Hastatii, etc would close ranks to form a continuous battle line. In a war game, I would not want to leave gaps in my battle line. My version of the Quincunx formation is depicted below:
Velites in front on the left, Hastatii in the second row, Princeps in the third line, and Triarii in the last line (shown on the left center of this picture next to the command tent). |
Here are some pictures of the Princeps figures that I finished two weeks ago
Princeps troops |
Hastatii troops in the mid-ground and some Velites in the foreground. |
Triarii wearing chain mail. |
I also painted 16 more Roman cavalry figures, bringing their contingent up to 32 Roman and 32 Italian allies cavalry figures, or 64 total figures. My Carthaginian army has 96 cavalry, half of which are Numidian light cavalry.
Roman cavalry organized into two 16-figure units:
I am slowly catching up on my figure basing. I have all of the Velites to base and 16 Celt-Iberians in the Carthaginian army.
Next up on the painting table: 16 Celt-Iberians and 32 Celts.
After all of that it will be time to start making Roman buildings for my town. One of my convention game scenarios will feature a Roman assault on a Carthaginian fortified city.
cc
Fantastic display of Roman eye candy.
ReplyDeleteWillz.
Those are just super!
ReplyDeleteSuper, lovely pictures
ReplyDeleteVery impressive collection, really well done.
ReplyDeleteThose look splendid! There is lots of argument over how the Legion deployed and whether lines swapped out or not. Interesting recent video on YouTube by Adrian Goldsworthy worth a look. This is going to be one impressive game.
ReplyDeleteThanks Andy, I will look up the film on YouTube.
Delete