Snippets #35

Another drive-by post delivered before the brain of von Peter himself drops the memories.

Idle times in front of a screen

First up a recent review of General d’Armee

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Next Check Your Leader TV brings us part one of a play through of the as yet unreleased Vexillarius rules. Rumour has it that the rules may be released at Salute 2026. So April 2026. At least a part two will be following …

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Christmas musings

Thoughts of Christmas 2025 have crept into the fevered brain of von Peter himself. The reason – books.

Broken Eagles – Napoleon and his German Allies in the 1813 Campaign: VOLUME I: Campaigns Overview, Bavaria, Saxony by John H. Gill. A second volume – Broken Eagles – Napoleon and his German Allies in the 1813 Campaign: Volume II – Württemberg, Baden, Hesse-Darmstadt, Westphalia and the Small States – is incoming at the end of the year(?).

Traditional accounts of the campaigns of 1813 concentrate on the major powers: Napoleon’s France versus Russia, joined successively by Prussia, Sweden and Austria, and how, as in the French catastrophe of 1812, early successes were transformed into ruinous defeat. However, the smaller German states in Napoleon’s alliance system, the Confederation of the Rhine, or Rheinbund, also played an important part.

Despite its significance, there are few books, especially in English, that explore the Rheinbund’s creation, evolution and demise. This groundbreaking new work seeks to redress this. Based on years of research in archives across Germany and France, as well as battlefield visits, this unprecedented study provides the first comprehensive analysis of the confederation’s military campaigns of 1813 – culminating in Napoleon’s defeat and the collapse of his German alliance.

Presented in two parts, this first volume opens with an overview of the Rheinbund as an institution, a summary of its brief history and an overview of the campaigns, battles and sieges of 1813. It then proceeds to a detailed examination of the activities of the armies of Saxony and Bavaria in this critical year. The second volume continues with an analysis of the forces of Württemberg, Baden and Hesse-Darmstadt, Westphalia and the multitude of smaller states that comprised the Rheinbund. Supplemented by more than 100 maps, charts and orders of battle, this is an essential reference work for any Napoleonic scholar and all those with an interest in the historical development of Germany.

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As a taster The dear readers of a podcast bent could listen the author on the subject via Napoleon’s Armies of the Confederation of the Rhine care of The Napoleonic Wars Podcast.

But there’s more

As if the temptations above were not enough there is yet another. Infantry in Battle 1733-1783 by Alexander S. Burns  …

Infantry in Battle rewrites the story of combat in the eighteenth century by placing enlisted infantrymen and their experiences at centre stage. While popular memory and film portray these men as robotic automata they fought in flexible and adaptable ways, and they left their mark on eighteenth-century warfare.
In Infantry in Battle, Dr Alexander S. Burns provides a new understanding of combat during the mid-eighteenth century: the pivotal period between 1733 and 1783. Professor Burns arguesthat eighteenth-century soldiers informally negotiated authority with their officers on the battlefield by firing without orders, firing at longer ranges than their officers preferred, and by taking cover on the battlefield. In this process, these enlisted men played an important role by asserting tactical reforms from below.
Infantry in Battle is grounded in archival research on the American, British, and Prussian armies. However, it also covers the armies of military Europe more broadly, and includes writings from Austrian, French, Italian, Polish, Russian, Spanish, and Swedish soldiers. It is also the first English-language book to utilize archival material on battles from the War of Polish Succession in Northern Italy.
Infantry in Battle is a scholarly monograph, but one written with a popular audience in mind. Like his mentor, the late Christopher Duffy, Professor Burns has longstanding connections to professional military education as well as wargamers and reenactors. Cutting through myth, we see motivated enlisted men who were capable of adapting their tactics to the needs of the battlefield, rather than terrorized automata firmly controlled by their officers.

‘The American researcher Alexander Burns is of a new generation, thoroughly at home with European archives and culture.’ Christopher Duffy
“Infantry in Battle is an important entry into the revisionist canon of works on contemporary warfare. It has broad appeal to historians, wargamers, reenactors, and enthusiasts alike. It is an invaluable work that belongs on shelves alongside those of Berkovich, the Möbiuses, Christy Pichichero, and, above all, Christopher Duffy.” Jonathan Abel, U.S. Army Command and General Staff College, Journal of Military History
“…an important entry into the revisionist canon of works on contemporary warfare. It has broad appeal to historians, wargamers, reenactors, and enthusiasts alike. It is an invaluable work that belongs on shelves alongside those of Berkovich, the Mobiuses, Christy Pichichero, and, above all, Christopher Duffy.” Journal of Military History.

Such a purchase would feed the curiosity of von Peter himself regarding the Seven Years War in Europe.

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Coincidently the The Napoleonic Wars Podcast provide a teaser for this book as well via Infantry in Battle – An 18th Century War of War Special.

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Enough.

Until we meet again …

Salute
von Peter himself

Snippets #34 Postscript

It’s like the proverbial buses. None for a while then several arrive.

Friction. A Wargame dilemma

Check Your Leader TV has posted an interesting video on friction in wargames rules. von Peter himself is FIRMLY of the opinion that some form of friction in wargames rules is a good thing. Not only does it introduce that reality check that events never/rarely go according to plan but it also adds to the game play by throwing various sized spanners into the works to keep the commanders on their toes. And above all it provides cover for the various military disasters that von Peter himself has overseen!  😇

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Piano Wargames presents the Grand Duchy of Baden

Piano Wargames are back with a new Kickstarter. This time it’s The Price of Crowns – The Grand Duchy of Baden. Get the STL files for 3D printing at a size of your choice or for the more traditional gamer the figures will be available in white metal.

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Enough.

Until we meet again …

Salute
von Peter himself

Snippets #34

A few bits and pieces.

Talking of rules

Alex Sotheran of Storm of Steel Wargaming fame has a chat with Dave Brown author of many rules including General d’Armee 2. Topics covered include …

  • How history shapes wargaming rules
  • The balance between historical accuracy and playability
  • Why his rules avoid becoming dry military simulations
  • His approach to designing engaging, historically grounded games.

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Upcoming Ancient rules

More Dave Brown “stuff” this time care of Check Your Leader TV. This time it’s a preview of Dave’s upcoming ancient rules VEXILLARIUS.

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Napoleonic French primary sources

A new find on the interweb is Jonas De Neef’s Napoleon Chronicles. As Jonas says himself ..

Welcome to The Napoleon Chronicles!

The goal of this blog is to make French primary source material available for a wide audience by translating them into English. It’s been a longtime passion of mine to read (literally) hundreds upon hundreds of Napoleonic memoirs and correspondence compilations of the men and women of all sorts of backgrounds who witnessed this most turbulent period in European history.

It’s a real pleasure for me to be able to present and share these accounts with all of you, most who have often been ignored or translated only now for the very first time. Enjoy!

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Enough. von Peter himself really should be pigmenting figures!!

Until we meet again …

Salute
von Peter himself

Hobby temperature testing & absolutely H-U-G-E output

Yet another year has rolled by and as is annually the case there is an attempt to take the temperature of the wargaming hobby. This time it is entitled The Great Wargaming Survey 2025. For the benefit of The dear readership von Peter himself has reprised his guinea pig duties by undertaking this latest rendition of the survey and the resultant gut feeling is that it was the speediest to complete.  As is usual around these parts for the advantage and titillation of The dear readers the official blurb is reproduced below …

Welcome to the 12th edition of the Great Wargaming Survey!

“If you know the enemy and know yourself, you need not fear the results of a hundred battles” – Sun Tzu

Apart from rolling dice, there seem to be few things wargamers like to do more than discussing the state of their hobby. This survey aims to answer some of those questions and publish the answers for all to see.

Thanks to our sponsors, we’ve got a stack of generous prizes to give to some lucky winners. On top of that, everyone gets a discount coupon worth €5 at the Karwansaray Publishers webshop, online access to three full back issues in the WSS Online web app, and an STL for a 3D-printed culvert.

Filling out the survey shouldn’t take more than about 10 minutes, and we’re taking responses until August 31st, 2025. Please tell all your wargaming friends to come take it too!

As always, this survey is aimed at tabletop miniature wargamers in order to keep things short and sweet.

Thank you very much for participating!

Guy Bowers & Jasper Oorthuys
Wargames, Soldiers & Strategy magazine

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The pigmenting brushes stirred a little

Whilst it be true that von Peter himself has slipped into another period of low pigmentation output due to ongoing extra curricular distractions the workshop has not been totally shut down. At least not quite! It was decided that the Saxon Jäger Korps – all six figures of them 🙄 – were in need of a casualty counter. To be honest that the pigmenting oversight committee would approve such a decision shows that committee in a not particularly flattering light. The six figure Saxon Jäger Korps will quite possibly just be used as constituents in a brigade skirmish screen … which will not require a casualty counter!! Despite the questionable decision the creation of the casualty was undertaken.

Being such a small unit Calpe Miniatures do not produce any casualty figures for the Saxon Jäger Korps. However they do have multiple casualty figures for the Saxon Light Infantry. A Light Infantry casualty figure was duly transferred into the Jäger Korps. Annoyingly however the two units are not identically dressed.

Firstly the Calpe Miniatures Saxon Jäger Korps do not wear a back packs. But to physically removed this from the Light Infantryman would entail serious surgery. von Peter himself and serious surgery are not compatible! The solution was to select a Light Infantry casualty figure who was lying on his back and twisted to the side. This left the back pack visible from one angle. Solution: obstruct the view of said back pack and associated rolled great coat with foliage. Such a low cost and low effort solution was perfect for von Peter himself. Unfortunately …

  1. the applied foliage does not completely disguise the back pack and associated rolled great coat. Yes more could be added but The dear reader must understand that this creation has now officially been designated the category of “Completed” so no further work is possible. 😇
  2. being of the character that he is von Peter himself could not resist painting the back pack and associated rolled great coat. They would have been better just painted black so as not to be so identifiable.

Secondly the Calpe Miniatures Saxon Jäger Korps shako sported a simple round pompon wheres the Light Infantry shako sported a tufted pompon. To sort this von Peter himself did manage to break out a craft knife and files to make the admittedly simple and more importantly easy conversion.

Any and all other conversions considered necessary were enacted via the judicious application of pigmentation.

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Finally. From the real life is stranger than fiction department a picture has been drawn of von Peter himself in his favourite formal attire being quizzed by a fellow gamer …

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🤣

Enough.

Until we meet again …

Salute
von Peter himself

Let there be light … magnified light

Another birthday has come and gone. Another year of deteriorating eyesight has come and gone. 💡 Perhaps one could assist the other⁉️

And so it came to pass that a magnifying light – or as it says on the box a “LED Desktop Magnifier” – was procured. It comes with multiple light colour modes and power settings which seems a shame as it is anticipated that only one of each will be used – a white light on a high power setting – apart from playing with the options. A quick trial with the contraption has returned promising results. 

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Also procured was a motorised turntable. The thinking is that it will aid by replacing multiple photos of figure(s) with a single video. We shall see.

The Eighteenth Century comes to the 21st century

When von Peter himself reinserted himself into miniature wargaming after his young man years at university – plus a few more! – it was the Seven Years War in Central Europe that claimed his attention. Much reading – a big thank you to the sadly departed Christopher Duffy – painting and gaming ensued. That Front Rank Figurines cast locally under licence were obtainable in New Zealand didn’t hurt either. Prussians and Austrians – later joined by a few Hanoverian and French – were recruited and gamed with.

So it was with great pleasure that the blog Kabinettskriege: An Eighteenth-Century Digital Humanities Project was stumbled upon.

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And consequential to that find was the discovery of the related Eighteenth Century podcast Prime and Load.

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Similar sources of media consumption for the Napoleonic period are plentiful but these are the first that von Peter himself can recall finding for the Eighteenth Century. Especially pleasing as it covers off the Seven Years War. The anticipation for the podcast episode “The Battle of Hohenfriedberg” is being savoured.

Model this

Of course von Peter himself should have been being productive rather than cruising the ‘net. But sometimes there is a payoff for such idleness. In this case it was stumbling upon the German(?) model maker’s Samy’s YouTube site. Amazing to watch the builds unfold. And it all looks so easy. Which is of course a big fat juicy lie. It aint easy! 🤬

By way of an example von Peter himself offers up a Medieval Rural House. The house itself and then the interior. I’m sure that the are some learnings for all contained within.

vvv Samy – Model Maker vvvv

Enough.

Until we meet again …

Salute
von Peter himself

Discounted books and a Partizan 2025

Life at Neu Schloss von Peter has been quite impinging for the last little while with builders destroying and then building, visitors, birthdays and other assorted distractions. This is said/typed as a pitiful excuse for a vastly diminished pigmenting output. 🫩 But it’s been a while so please accept this scanty offering to the The dear readership.

Napoleonic book sale

Naval & Military Press are holding a sale on some of their Napoleonic titles. For the listing take a look over at their Napoleonic listings!

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The blurb says “a full 25% discount off all titles that fall into our web category Napoleonic” but von Peter himself is confused as there are many books listed with a discount in excess of 25% …

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Not that one should complain.

Get in quick though as the sale ends on Monday 23 June, 2025.

Partizan has come and gone for 2025

Several weeks ago now. Some viewing for themselves who did not make the show in person like this person …

Enough.

Until we meet again …

Salute
von Peter himself

Snippets #33

Yet another skirmish base has been spat out of the creaking production line at Neu Schloss von Peter. The 2/4th East Prussian Landwehr Infantry Regiment are the beneficiaries this time …

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And because skirmishing and fighting battles inevitably comes at a cost casualty bases have been provisioned for the 2nd and 3rd battalions of the 4th East Prussian Landwehr Infantry Regiment. The casualty figures can be identified with that of the 2nd battalion having red shoulder straps and the that of the third sporting yellow. Not that the image provided shows these off!

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And because skirmishing and fighting battles inevitably creates a mess further domestic help has been procured …

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The lonely mounted Feldjaeger on the next Prussian command base gained some company in the form of a dismounted ADC. The ADC will – in a hopefully not too distant future – be shown to be diligently acting as a horse holder for his higher ups. Locally there is a little concern as to whether the whole cacophony of planned figures and horses will comfortably and realistically fit on the standard command base – of drinks coaster dimensions! – as shown in the image. Several dry runs have been dry runned/ran(!?) but in the end time will tell. Not a particularly revealing image of the ADC. Perhaps a little mystery is a good thing?

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Prussians are the creations of Calpe Miniatures. The domestic help is from Front Rank Figurines.

Salute 52

Another Salute has come and gone yet again without a thought for the remote von Peter himself. Perhaps the intervening 11,675.26 mi (18,789.51 km) from Paekākāriki, New Zealand to the Excel Centre in London has something to do with it. But we can all live vicariously through the eyes – and cameras – of others.

Note that von Peter himself has not necessarily viewed all of these reports in their entirety.

There are even some views care of the fairer gender. Their priority may not be historical gaming but good to see all the same …

Enough.

Until we meet again …

Salute
von Peter himself

Snippets #32

Back in September 2024 von Peter himself became aware that some of the works of W.J. (Bill) Rawkins originally available under The History Book Man label were again available care of Anschluss. And now it seems that another volume is on the horizon/available: The Army of the Kingdom of Prussia 1797-1806.

It is currently a little confusing as the website says that the book is available for pre order but it is available for pickup at the Salute Wargames Show this coming Saturday as this post is being typed.

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Whilst on the Anschluss site The Armies of Baden and Wurttemburg from 1806 to 1814 was also spotted. The name “Rawkins” is not to be seen but perhaps this is an amalgamation of two of his old titles …

  • CB17 – The Army of the Grand Duchy of Baden: 1806 – 1814
  • CB19 – The Army of the Kingdom of Württemberg: 1806 – 1814.

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Huge strides

More huge strides have been made in recruiting for the local Napoleonic forces. <cough!> A week long work conference didn’t help but in truth von Peter himself is a truly doddery and distracted pigmenter.

The gentleman with hand to face in the photo below is the casualty base for the French 3/132nd Ligne. The 3/132 Ligne has not completed its transition from the unpigmented mountain of reserve forces but having the casualty figure available is a good – or ominous! -start. Surely?!

The two yellow faced figures represent the skirmisher base for the Saxon 1/Prinz Maximilian Infantry Regiment. At least the parent battalion is pigmented and on active duty! Not that the creation of the skirmish base was without issue. These were meant to have been pigmented already except grenadier figures were selected in error – see Some meagre output from von Peter himself for the sordid details.

All three figures from the Calpe Miniatures stable.

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A little humour

The humour below may cut quite close to the bone but amuses von Peter himself all the same.

As posted on Bluesky by ‪TableTopBill‬

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Enough.

Until we meet again …

Salute
von Peter himself

A little more

More meagre output

The 4/132nd Ligne is now complete with a casualty marker and skirmisher base. Vive L’Empereur!

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Above: Fusilier Pierre has gone down in front of the battalion. A couple of skirmishers – a voltigeur officer and bugler – have been sent out to discover from whence the shot came.

The two skirmishing figures are from Calpe Miniatures. The casualty is a Front Rank Figurine that was lying – ha ha – around at Neu Schloss von Peter. Little known fact: there were two casualty figures but one was generously donated to The son & heir and is destined to become an Italian. Calpe Miniatures are the preferred supplier for the French at Neu Schloss von Peter but as yet they produce neither casualty packs – though there is a falling casualty in the “F17 Cherry on the icing pack”! – or firing figures.

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Above: the scouting party is scampering back – “Alarme! Il y en a des milliers!!”.**

** A free translation for the less educated of The dear readership: “Alarm! There’s thousands of them!!”  🤣

Please Sir, can I have some of these

Which neatly leads into … so what does von Peter himself hope for from a reinvigorated Calpe Miniatures once the transfer of the existing ranges to Gripping Beast is complete. Hmmm. A quick listing …

  • French firing infantry for Légère (light) battalions and skirmishing bases
  • French casualty figures for casualty markers – preferrably prone
  • French artillery figures to go with the French cannons long available
  • Saxon limbers and caissons
  • French limbers and caissons
  • Saxon cavalry – Prinz Clemens Uhlans and hussars
  • French higher command, e.g. general de brigade, general de division types
  • Saxon heavy cavalry for 1813 – Leib Kuirassiere Garde and Zastrow Kuirassiere
  • Saxon horse artillery
  • Saxon horse artillery limbers and caisson if these differ from the foot varieties above – the current idle state of von Peter himself prevents him from getting of his a*rse to check. Apologies. 😇

The above list is obviously(?) not all encompassing. Obviously French cavalry and Prussian Kuirassieres are required for example. But the above lists the more immediately pressing requirements for a self absorbed and self centred von Peter himself.

WIP

An occasional report on what’s on the workbench. Perhaps it will shame von Peter himself to greater exertions?!


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Front Row left to right: 2 Saxon skirmishers; 3 Prussian artillery drivers; a trumpeter for the Volunteer Jagers of the 1st Leib Hussar Regiment and his horse; a female civilian.

Second Row: 4 voltigeurs and 4 fusiliers. The beginnings of a French battalion.

Third row: 6 Prussian artillery team horses; 4 Saxon Guard Grenadier figures pulled out a whiles back as something different to paint. It may be a while until they get past their undercoat.

Not that any of The dear readers can discern much from the image provided! 🤯

The public shame when this image changes hardly at all will not be a new experience! Of course many other figures will move on to and off the workbench before all of the above are fully pigmented and moved on. I’m looking at all the casualty and skirmisher figures, command stands and the fickleness of painting urges.

A grumble

And what could make von Peter himself happier than a chance to have a grumble? It may be just the jaundiced eye of von Peter himself but it would appear that WordPress is again getting a bit heavy handed with the advertising. Mutter mutter. 🤬

A gentle note that the images can be “clicked” for a larger and clearer view.

Enough.

Until we meet again …

Salute
von Peter himself