1866 Austrian Gun Teams

Started by Hertsblue, 08 January 2014, 05:40:38 PM

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Leman

Excellent stuff. Got to get me some of those.
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cameronian

Horse artillery the world over has a certain panache which they cultivate, each and every difference, sartorial or otherwise, which distinguishes the dashing gallopers from their plodding cousins is seized upon and cultivated, it might simply have been that the horse gunners affected the plume in the field as well as on parade for that reason, show.
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Hertsblue

Quote from: cameronian on 12 March 2014, 11:05:16 AM
Horse artillery the world over has a certain panache which they cultivate, each and every difference, sartorial or otherwise, which distinguishes the dashing gallopers from their plodding cousins is seized upon and cultivated, it might simply have been that the horse gunners affected the plume in the field as well as on parade for that reason, show.

Absolutely.
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mollinary

John Dz, Holdfast, has kindly had a look at the relevant section in Teuber and Ottenfeld's history of the Austrian Army up to 1867. His German is much better than mine, but I don't think this source solves our problem.  It clearly identifies the original introduction of the new plumed shake for officers only. It then describes the shako cover, how it was attached around the plume, and mentions that the shako was worn in its cover, apart from on parades.  It then describes the later regulations which modify the shako, and extend its use to other ranks in the Field artillery, and officers in the technical artillery.  It makes no mention of removal of the plume, or the shako, in the field. More interestingly, it mentions no distinction between the foot and horse artillery.  So, I think I would go for just the figure with the plume, for all my gunners.    Of course, nothing is definitive so far,  so await with interest  anyone else's discoveries.


Mollinary
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Leon

Quote from: mollinary on 21 March 2014, 06:52:43 PM
John Dz, Holdfast, has kindly had a look at the relevant section in Teuber and Ottenfeld's history of the Austrian Army up to 1867. His German is much better than mine, but I don't think this source solves our problem.  It clearly identifies the original introduction of the new plumed shake for officers only. It then describes the shako cover, how it was attached around the plume, and mentions that the shako was worn in its cover, apart from on parades.  It then describes the later regulations which modify the shako, and extend its use to other ranks in the Field artillery, and officers in the technical artillery.  It makes no mention of removal of the plume, or the shako, in the field. More interestingly, it mentions no distinction between the foot and horse artillery.  So, I think I would go for just the figure with the plume, for all my gunners.    Of course, nothing is definitive so far,  so await with interest  anyone else's discoveries.

Thanks for the info!

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Hertsblue

Quote from: mollinary on 21 March 2014, 06:52:43 PM
John Dz, Holdfast, has kindly had a look at the relevant section in Teuber and Ottenfeld's history of the Austrian Army up to 1867. His German is much better than mine, but I don't think this source solves our problem.  It clearly identifies the original introduction of the new plumed shake for officers only. It then describes the shako cover, how it was attached around the plume, and mentions that the shako was worn in its cover, apart from on parades.  It then describes the later regulations which modify the shako, and extend its use to other ranks in the Field artillery, and officers in the technical artillery.  It makes no mention of removal of the plume, or the shako, in the field. More interestingly, it mentions no distinction between the foot and horse artillery.  So, I think I would go for just the figure with the plume, for all my gunners.    Of course, nothing is definitive so far,  so await with interest  anyone else's discoveries.


Mollinary

I think, when all's said and done, that the presence or not of a plume on a 10mm figure is something only wargamers would argue over. I'm with Molliary.
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Leman

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mollinary

Well, here we go with thread necromancy again!   Just back from a most enjoyable trip to Bohemia touring the battlefields, and managed to have a chat on this subject with a Czech expert. His name is Mr Grof, and he is responsible for the upkeep of all the monuments in the Trautenau area. He has also set up an impressive museum concentrating on the artillery during this war  in St John's chapel on the battlefield. Artillery is his specialism, and he has original copies of all the regulations of this period.  He is even supervising the construction of full scale replicas of Austrian rifled fortress artillery for the museum at the fortress of Josefstadt.  The statement that the foot artillery did not wear the plume in 1866 he believes originates in a book on the Austrian Artillery written by the director of the Austrian Army History Museum in Vienna. He was less than complimentary about the accuracy of various aspects of the text! He was quite firm that the Foot Artillery did wear the plume on campaign in 1866, and that the use of the small detachable rainproof cover was also widespread.  I do not think I am going to find a better source, so for me, my foot artillery crews keep their plumes!

Mollinary
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FierceKitty

Remember that there are three centuries of bad blood between the Czechs and the Austrians, of course.
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mollinary

Quote from: FierceKitty on 31 July 2014, 11:04:06 AM
Remember that there are three centuries of bad blood between the Czechs and the Austrians, of course.

Maybe so, but it would hardly be forwarded by a respected authority suggesting that foot gunners wore their plumes on campaign!  :-\  - you wouldn't have shaved yours off by any chance, would you, FK?   :D ;)

Mollinary
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cameronian

31 July 2014, 12:25:46 PM #25 Last Edit: 31 July 2014, 12:27:41 PM by cameronian
Must say I'd believe Grof on this; don't suppose he mentioned the pamphlet I've been trying to get him to write ? How was the trip, did you unearth anything new ?
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Hertsblue

Phew! So we have avoided that massive clanger - more by luck than judgement. Better tell Leon, though. He was about to create two separate masters.  :o
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Leon

Quote from: Hertsblue on 31 July 2014, 06:14:59 PM
Phew! So we have avoided that massive clanger - more by luck than judgement. Better tell Leon, though. He was about to create two separate masters.  :o

Bit late now, we've already moulded both sets...  :D

Never mind, anyone need some 'generic' Austrian-ish limber riders without any plumes...  :-\
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mollinary

Actually, they would make perfect members of the support train, as outriders for pulling supply wagons. Good job you didn't model the gun crew without them as well!  :D. Of course, the question which might be asked by the ungenerous, is when will we get the limber sitter figures WITH  the plume!  :-\ ;)

Mollinary
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Leon

Quote from: mollinary on 31 July 2014, 06:31:57 PM
Of course, the question which might be asked by the ungenerous, is when will we get the limber sitter figures WITH  the plume!  :-\ ;)

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