It's not designed to be a completely accurate representation. It's designed to field an Old School Persian army based on Garrison 20mm figures and conversions of Garrison figures. These may or may not be close to the descriptions in Herodotus or 'Armies of the Greek and Persian Wars'. Often not! Equally, it isn't meant to cover every contingent in every Corps - although some Corps may be represented by more than one contingent. The idea is to present all the different Corps.
Must admit I've spent more time on this (figures and post!) than just about any other Review - I've trialled three different layots and 'formally' considered two different force compositions - plus other odd thoughts that didn't get past that!
My final thoughts were this. Herodotus describes 30 Corps of 60,000 men each. Looking at it, I finally settled on representing each Corps by 6 elements so that each element nominally represented 10,000 men on Herodotus' lists. As some elements only included 2 or 3 figures, that merely represents units that sent 'understrength' units!
In terms of numbers, there are 8 24 figure Corps, 14 18 figure Corps and 8 12 figure Corps. This represents 540 figures in total. If each figure represents 2,500 men the whole infantry force represents 1,350,000 men.
Incidentally, I got a bit confused with the numbers - at 10,000 Immortals and 60,000 for the other 29 Corps, 'Armies of the Greek and Persian Wars' got the total to 1,175,000 - I couldn't understand why, even by making the Immortals the same size as the other Corps thus adding 50, 000 to my total, I got a number 175,000 higher than they did - simple answer, the book added the numbers up wrong! The obvious clue - if all their numbers were multiples of 10,000, how can the total have a 5,000 in it? Took me ages to work it out - you always assume the book is right!
A view down the army from the left flank. Of the 30 Corps only 5 don't include at least some conversions in their ranks. |
Xerxes reviewing the army accompanied by Guard cavalry - I'm not including these cavalry as part of the army. |
As Mardonius was in charge of the army at Plataea I'm using this to represent him as the 'real' general of the invasion army. |
Because I'm sticking to '6 elements per Corps' a couple of Corps are only represented by half units - this is Corps XXV and includes Cabalees and Milyae. |
Another 'split' Corps - XVIII with Ethiopians and Arabians. The Libyans of Corps XIX are in the background. |
Other people's figures - Corps VI Assyrians using figures bought from Harry Pearson. These are the figures he says he used as Tarbisa infantry in his Apocryphal Well recreation - think he got mixed up with the Tutub infantry though - Tutubs should have been the Garrison figures and Tarbisa the Minifigs. |
Corps XX Paphlagonians - ex-Charles Grant figures next to those Libyans again! |
Which leaves me with a 'what to do next'?
There are actually at least three things here. One would be the cavalry, next would be the Marines, and the last would be the army as constituted for Plataea. Do I do the first two as separate items or do I just add them to the infantry? Still thinking about it....
Talking about the cavalry, considering I'm probably close to reaching the 400 mark on Garrison Persian cavalry, it seems silly to be thinkingabout what else I 'need'. However, if I'm going to make an attempt to match the infantry and cavalry... need Caspian and Paricanian equivalents. As the infantry versions of these are themselves converted from one of my 'new' horse archer figures (by adding a cloak) it makes sense to use those horse archers as the cavalry. It would be awkward to add the cloak, but uncloaked should be fine. I already have one unit painted as late Achaemenids, but the addition of one more will do for now. The other unit is a unit of Indian cavalry. This will simply be the Egyptian horse archer minus plume and different paint job - the same figure I used as the Arab camel rider - so need to sort them out.
Next, marines. To be honest I've got more than enough figures for most purposes. I've got the Carians, Aeolians, Asian Greeks, Phoenicians, Egyptians and Lycians done already. If I can't find a couple of Greek style units of whatever type for Pontus and Cyprus from my other Greeks I want shooting. This leaves the Cilicians - so could do with another unit of J/Sh infantry in tunic/trousers.
Finally, Plataea... take away some of the current Corps, add some of the Marines (ie Egypians), then add Thebans that already exist...
Superlative Rob. The army cries out to fight the Greeks. My favourites have to be the Immortals, Ethiopians and Assyrians, but they all have a wonderful charm. Just remember if you have any Grant spare figures Im your man.Well done.
ReplyDeleteThank you :)
DeleteWonderful looking army Rob!
ReplyDeleteThank you.
DeleteTerrific looking army, ready to conquer the world...
ReplyDeleteFirst, Greece....
DeleteNow that IS what an ancients wargame army should look like - great work!
ReplyDeleteThe project continues!
DeleteA Horde (hoard?) indeed!
ReplyDeleteI'll have to pull these posts up on the old laptop connect to the tv so I can see them on the big screen.
It's part of my hoard of hordes.
Delete