Like other European countries, there were foreign mercenary units in the Spanish Army of early XIX century. Some infantry regiments of Swiss, Wallonian and Irish origin. The Regiment of Hibernia, created at 1709, was one of the three Irish regiments at 1808. The other two were the Irlanda and the Ultonia. They fought through the War of Independence of 1808-1814 (Peninsular War for you, anglosaxon people ;) and suffered the same hard conditions, drawbacks and (sometimes) victories, like the rest of the Spanish Army. An army that fought in an occupied homeland (occupied by the most powerful army of the era, the Napoleonic French), with its Corps dispersed around the periphery, without the lead of a central government and bad supplied both in materials and reinforcements. An army defeated by the French on most of the battles they fought, but that kept coming back to fight on another day, bleeding the French Army and keeping tens of thousands of French troops, with the help of the guerrilla, out of the way of the Wellington’s Allied Army.
Apart of that, I love Ireland, I do. I’ve been there near a dozen of times and I had very good moments and memories: hiking at the countryside, travelling around a big part of the island and, of course, enjoying the people, the music, countless Guinness and pub craic.
They are the last addition to my 1808 Spanish Army project. Closing ranks with their eighth fellow countryman (painted before the challenge), the grenadier comrades of the Valencia Line Infantry Regiment and the Volunteers of Catalonia 1st Light Infantry Battalion.
So 7x28mm figures plus 50 theme bonus = 85 points.
See you soon
Snazzy!
ReplyDeleteI love Spanish Napoleonic uniforms. I know what you mean about the filigree - surely someone somewhere does a decal? (If not, there's a gap in the market for some enterprising individual).
ReplyDeleteGreat to see Spanish Irish, love the bipright yellow flames on the bearskins. As for the fillagree, that’s something best handled by trying to get the overall look right on table and not trying to replicate the original pattern
ReplyDeleteSimply beautiful work Franjo!
ReplyDeleteThank you all for your comments!
ReplyDeleteSometime in the future, after the project is done, I would like to try to paint the filigree. I've seen others that have painted it so it is possible ;)
Great looking Irish grenadiers!
ReplyDeleteBest Iain
Holy cow, that is excellent stuff Franjo.
ReplyDeleteI don't blame you for taking a pause on the filigree...
Superb work, I really like them, better to leave the filigree as is than risk detracting from your great paint job.
ReplyDeleteVery fgood work, the blue tones are outstanding. Have you cheked if someone makes water decals for the shako tail?
ReplyDeleteLovely work on those blues and yellows!
ReplyDeleteMarvelous figures, the headgear looks impractical and uncomfortable, they must be from the Napoleonic period. As for the extra details, I guess it's a question of how would they appear at tabletop distance and is it worth the effort. Just a dash of colour in the right place might be enough.
ReplyDeleteAmazing work on this unit Franjo, they're really something!
ReplyDeleteBeautiful work Franjo!
ReplyDelete