Visualizzazione post con etichetta Dbmm. Mostra tutti i post
Visualizzazione post con etichetta Dbmm. Mostra tutti i post

domenica 12 giugno 2016

Dbmm Turin 2016

In June  my club ("La piccola armata") organized the annual Dbmm tournement. I was not one of the partecipant but I took some pictures.

I want point out that I've not painted the miniatures showed in the following photos. All miniatures are masterpiece of the Dbmm partecipants.


All the tournement details (ie rank, players, armies) can be find at the following address:> http://www.lapiccolaarmata.it/or> http://www.tagmata.it/


The pictures  are  details of the armies deployed during the game. 

War of the roses and Tudor painted by Marco D. 


 

Ancient British painted by Riccardo M.

 

French Ordonnance

 

Ottomans

 

Swiss Army and Italian Condotta

 

A couple of pictures of the battle between Italian Condotta and Ottomans.
At the end of the match the Ottomans took the Italian camp

 
 
 
 
 



martedì 2 giugno 2015

Dbmm 2015 Turin

On April 11 and 12 my club ("La piccola armata") organized the annual Dbmm tournament. 

I was not one of the participants but I took some pictures of the different tables.

All the tournament details (ie rank, players, armies) can be find at the following address:
A picture of all the players in front of the building that houses the club


> http://www.lapiccolaarmata.it/
or
> http://www.tagmata.it/

A quick overview of the different tables









A detail of Marco’s Nikephorian Byzantine. Unfortunately I took the photos with my mobile and the resolution level is so good as I would but shields and banner are very well painted. 


It is significant also the contrast of miniatures dimensions with the dices in the landscape.


lunedì 21 aprile 2014

Celtiberians

The Celtiberians were one of the ethnic groups in the pre-Roman Iberian (the actual Spain).
During the Second Punic Wars they were allies of Carthage and some of them crossed the Alps under the Hannibal's command.

The Romans spent years to pacify those tribes but, at the end, the Iberia becames a Roman province. Celtiberians served as auxiliary unit during the Roman Empire period.

I prepared some bases of these tribes as Dbmm Aux


Scutarii, generally  were equipped with a sword, a great oval shield (scutum) and heavy javelins The design of the roman legionaries' sword (the gladius) was largely influenced by the blades carried by these troops.


Caetrati were equipped in a similar way but they use a smaller shield called caetra



domenica 13 aprile 2014

Dbmm 2014 Torino

On April 12 and 13 my club ("La piccola armata") organized the annual Dbmm tournement. Unfortunately I could not be one of the partecipants but I took some pictures and I had the opportunity to know some other Dbmm players.

All the tournement details (ie rank, players, armies) can be find at the following address:
> http://www.lapiccolaarmata.it/
or
> http://www.tagmata.it/

A picture of all the players in front of the building that houses the club


A quick overview of the different tables






As it is possible to see above. The tables and, consequently, the struggles were many. I concentrated my attention on two of them:
- Ming chinese vs Later Swiss

 

The battle was for all the time a pursuit by the Swiss army while the Chinese continued to hit the enemy with their artillery. At the end the Swiss reached the enemy but they lost the camp. 


- Ottoman vs Siamese
An overview of the initial movements 


the main struggle took place on the Ottoman right flank


At the end the battle was substantially a draw even if the two players decided to continue the fight after the regular time.


And finally the awards painted by one of the best painters of the club: Flavio




lunedì 24 marzo 2014

Late Imperial Roman Army 15 mm

I started to paint miniatures around twenty years ago.  I'm keen of roman history and so my choose was a logical consequence. In that period I was a student  and, to save money, I bought a box of 15mm Essex roman army. Acting on impulse I painted them without a real study of the uniforms, weapons, shields and so on.

Last December I took again my old miniatures and I decided to re-painted them ... the situation could be substantially reported in these photos



On the left site the new version ... generally I prefer the 28mm. The detail level of 15mm is not hight as I would ... I did my best



Today the situation it is a bit changed ... 



The army composition is based on Dbmm book 3: 20 psiloi, 11 light cavalries, 17 blades, 18 auxiliaries, 12 warbands, 2 artilleries, 5 command groups and 11 regular cavalries ... around 290 miniatures.

This time I prepared the army better. I don't want to write a book on late roman army but I think that it is necessary a brief introduction. 

First of all a detail: late roman army is the Roman Empire force from Costantine's reform (around 4th century) till the fall of its western part. In that period the high command was divided between emperor, magister peditum, equitum, dux and the term "legion" was only a memory. The army included many units that maintained names and titles more for  tradition than for a real specialization. 
The army was, to be brief, divided between palatini/comitatenses/scholae (the field army) and limitanei/pseudocomitateneses (the border force).

The cavalry


The first line is composed by cataphractariiTheir equipment shows Sarmatian influences with armoured horses, the long lance called contus and the scale armours (lorica squamata). The Notitia Dignitum reported that only a unit of these cavalrymen remained in the west during the 5th century. Effectively the Cataphracatarii were more frequent in the east. 



Light cavalry was the core of the mounted reserve of the 3rd-4th century. The three units on the left are equites sagittarii the other are equites illyricani. The sagittarii were created probably in the east to help Roman army against Persian and Hunnic troops. On contrary Illyricani were recruited from the frontier of the Balkans.

The infantry



In the foreground of the second photo the bulk of the roman army: some comitatenses units. From left to right: the britones seniores, the lanciarii iuniores, the prima flavia gemina tracia and the armigeri defensores seniores. All 17 blades of my army are a unit described in the Notitia dignitatum and all shields are handmade.

Another photo with some details of a command group back 



Limitanei and pseudolimitanei



Limitanei were the "border army" and they are  wrongly considered a militia of local farmers. They fought incessantly the barbarian raids and it is therefore likely that their combat readiness and experience were higher.
As for my comitatenses forces all auxiliaries were specific Notitia units. In the foregorund from left to right: the fortenses, a unit of auxilia palatina, the cornuti seniores, the batavi, the iovii iuniores gallicani
Shields of the second lines are based on the Italian villa armerina mosaics.

And to complete a group of Goths warbands



Goths were a Germanic tribes that played an important role in the fall of Roman Empire but for centuries they served as auxiliaries in Roman army.