Blood and Crowns
Recommendations: 67
About the Project
My research and army building for the upcoming kickstarter Blood and Crowns
Related Genre: Historical
This Project is Active
Wasail
For those wanting to have an in theme drink whilst playing this Christmas, I can recommend a cup of warming Wasail.
The authentic recipe is really easy to do.
Ingredients
Third of a pint of apple juice
Juice and zest of 1 lemon
Eighth teaspoon of ground nutmeg
Quarter of a teaspoon of Cinnamon
Quarter of a teaspoon of ginger
28g of sugar
1 pint of Ale
Teaspoon of honey
Add everything together in a big pan heat it gently and don’t boil and then drink.
Update
Since getting the rules, I have done very little. What I have done is getting models red. So it’s all the archers are based now, just waiting to be undercoated. Unfortunately the snow hasn’t given up, so it will have to wait.
On an interesting aside I found this book in the library. It’s a perfect example of the old adage never judge a book by its cover. It may look the a cheap romance novel but it a really interesting read on medieval Christmas customs. It also includes a recipes for things like Wasale, which might end up been added to this project log, for those that want a true emercive game.
Rules
The rules have now arrived. It may be in PDF form, but its a start. I can figure out what I need to built, paint to play the game.
Now that Terrainfest has finished, I should really start to consider the tables I’d be playing on. The problem with playing games like 40k is that most of my scenery is really gothic.
And just like that
I wanted to go with a cinematic pallet version of the middle ages rather than a brighter historical look.
So starting with a black undercoat and then I dry brushed to give them a more grimmy feel
What did Spearmen wear
Since ordinary soldiers seem to have worn padded hauberks, metal-studded brigandines, chainmail shirts, even steel breastplates, and certainly steel helmets, spearmen could undoubtedly have taken their place alongside fully armoured men- at-arms in the main battle-line.
What models to use
There’s guys. I have loads sitting in a bits box. Since the Perry’s sculptured them to be perfect in period, it would be rude not to.
What an Archer is wearing this season
So what does an archer wear? The problem is no one seems to really cares. As far as I can find there is no written primary sources saying what archers wore. (if anyone knows of any please comment below) They might be the great heroes of the 100 years war, but a peasant is still a peasant. The only thing we have are images from the period.
Those images so that they fought with little or no armour. On there heads they seem to wear, some kind of bacinet up to 1,000 are recorded in the Royal Armoury inventory. . Other, smaller skullcap-like helmets may have been worn as well. For defending the arms and torso, a cloth defense (sometimes called s jack) was most common. These could be made of padding quilted into cloth, or simply of multiple layers of cloth, generally linen. Though these armours do not look like much, they appear to be very effective – a 30 layer of jack protects well against sword slashes, longbow arrows and spears.
The equipment of archers at Agincourt is much murkier than the men-at-arms and knights. They were armed with a warbow with a draw weight of somewhere between 90 and 150 pounds. They would be armed with two dozen or so very stout arrows of around 30 inches in length However, the archers also fought in close combat with the French – they didn’t just shoot. Accounts of the archers joining the melee mention them taking up axes, swords, spearheads and ‘mauls’. What the mauls in particular were is unclear it is likely they were simply mallets used to drive their stakes into the ground.





































