Cavalry. The Galatians and Gauls can each run cavalry-heavy armies. With this batch, I've doubled my cavalry from 6 to 12 bases .
Javelinmen. The Galatians don't get many skirmishers so I need to make these 8 bases count.
Javelinmen. The Galatians don't get many skirmishers so I need to make these 8 bases count.
Soldurii. Soldurii only appear in the Gallic list and among the Gauls, these fellows are tops. They represent troops sworn to die for their chief in battle. They are elite, armored heavy foot. That's as good as it gets in FoG. Soldurii are the Hammer of the Gods in a Gallic army. Use your hammer wisely!
Thracian Bowmen. The very worst thing about the Old Glory15 website is a lack of pictures. I wanted Paionian javelinmen so I clicked on and ordered javelinmen (with no picture). I got Thracian bowmen instead. Gauls can field bow so I painted these up and won't look back. Dammit, I accidentally looked back and now I'm angry all over again! How hard is it to post pictures of the products you sell on the web?
My last bit of Galatian reporting is that "The Dying Gaul" is going to appear in Washington DC at the National Gallery of Art through March 16. This is a big deal as the statue has not left its home in almost 200 years. The Wall Street Journal posted an excellent article on the statue including these two delicious tidbits:
- Experts think his hair was a foot longer before being cropped in the 17th Century.
- The original was painted.
To top off my 15mm painting run, I've got a workmanlike Union army for Longstreet to post up. Longstreet popped up quickly and I decided to throw in with a pending campaign. I had 2 weeks to turn a pile of mediocre lead into a slightly less mediocre army. I finished just in time for our test run but that's a story for another day. After Longstreet, it'll be a steady diet of 28mm warbands for SAGA.