Carolingian Frank Heavy Infantry I
The yellow flower I place on all of my French bases is a common weed here locally and where Geoffrey V of Anjou got the Plantagenet nickname from, as he fathered a lot of bastard children so many they were like a weeds. The original name for the plant was planta genista in Latin before being changed in the 1900s to Cytisus scoparius or common broom. The plant was also used as a heraldic badge by five other Plantagenet kings of England, Anjou, Maine, Normandy and Aquitaine as the royal emblem.The "broomscod", or seed-pod, was also the personal emblem of Charles VI of France.
Much on the desk at the moment with six units awaiting basing, just waiting on yellow tufts to arrive from Germany.
Cheers
Matt
16 comments:
This is a great unit Matt!
Bravo!
:-)
Cheers mate, more coming this week
Superb work, Matt! Is this an Impetus sized base?
Lovely work
Beautiful Frankish warriors, Matt. Great combination of different makes.
Frankly, my dear Matt, they are stupendous! Love the basing as well!
Thanks Johnathon
12cm x 6cm deep for light and heavy foot, 12cm x 4cm for Skirmishers, 12cm x 8cm for cavalry and elephants. Siege engines and heavy artillery 12 x12 cm
Cheers Neil, I do like them!
Thanks Dean!
Thank you mate
Excellent Franks Matt!
Cheers mate
Lovely work! My compliments :)
Lovely stand and thanks for the explanation for and behind the yellow tufts.
Cheers mike
Thanks Paul, yes I was asked by someone on a forum so I thought I would post the explanation
Cheers
Matt
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