Showing posts with label Victrix. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Victrix. Show all posts

Monday, 16 December 2024

Three mounted Roman leaders

These are all from the Victrix pack of Early Imperial mounted Roman generals

First, here is a character that I'll probably use as the praefectus cohortis for my auxiliary troops, or maybe as the praefectus equitatus for the cavalry alone.

Next, I have a more senior leader, so I've put him on a base with a second mounted figure;

On the left, we have a very senior centurio, perhaps a legionary primus pilum or the centurio of the first century in an auxiliary cohort and on the right is an army commander, who might be a legate or a tribunus militum.

Clearly, these will be serving as heroic leaders in games of Midgard. I also have some small two and three hole movement trays which I'm using for leaders on foot. 

I've completed the rebasing of my Victrix Early Imperial auxilia now, so they are all on 12cm frontage movement trays. The force looks pretty impressive, but I have auxiliary archers to finish painting to provide some serious long range firepower.

The backdrop is, of course, by Jon Hodgson.



Saturday, 17 October 2020

Hopefully, the end of wargaming painter's block

 Well, I finally finished off the last of my Roman auxiliary cavalry. There are seven figures in total.

Two groups of equites.


And to lead them, a second decurio.


To distinguish these riders from the other two groups, who have red or blue neckerchiefs, I have given these green ones. I have also used one of the heads on the sprue which is supposed to be for praetorian cavalry for the decurio, and why shouldn't I? I am sure that there was plenty of variation amongst the different cohorts and we know that there wasn't really as much standardisation as Hollywood, and many wargamers too, would have us believe.

Once again, these are all Victrix plastics, on Warbases oval bases and movement trays and the excellent tufts are from Gamer's Grass, which is stocked by Bad Squiddo Games.

I still have a few auxilia bodies left, and I'll probably use some to make up another deployment/ambush point, but I really need a break from Romans for the moment. I might do some recreational 15mm figures for a change. I have some 18th century impact cavalry to do for Syldavia and Borduria, or I might finally start doing something about my essentially pointless Volkssturm project for Germany in  late 1944 and 1945. At best, they will be a minor irritation to any British, American or, more likely Soviet opponents.


Thursday, 20 August 2020

At last! The sun is shining, Pt. Two - Napoleonic Light Bobs

Actually, there are twenty-one Light Bobs in total, so scroll down to see them all.

These are all Victrix 28mm plastics from the British Peninsular War flank company box set.

First, three groups of six skirmishing light infantry with muskets.


In keeping with my preference for battleworn-looking troops, these are stained, dusty and a bit battered.


Note that I have varied the colours of their trousers. I wanted to give the impression that these chaps have been in the field for long enough for their uniforms to get tatty and their trousers to wear out.


Finally, three leaders for the troops; two NCOs and an officer.


These troops are intended to be Light Company skirmishers for my 61st Foot, hence their green shako plumes.

I decided a while ago that the Baker Rifle-equipped 95th and Portuguese Atiradores were not always ideal in all situations, being expensive in points and also slow to reload. Therefore, I wanted to bolster my British Sharp Practice force with some ordinary flank company Light Bobs with muskets. Yes, they lack the range of the Rifles, but they only require one reload action and are cheaper in points costs. My troops have already suffered a lot from attacks by French voltigeurs in numerous games, enough to make me realise that the British also needed some musket-equipped light troops of their own.

That isn't to say that I am retiring my 95th Rifles, far from it. I am just increasing my options, after reviewing the situation.

Anyway, I really have to give the leaders some names, so; from left to right we have;

Sergeant Harry Stottle, a grizzled veteran of the 1st Battalion who first served in the Caribbean campaign of the 1790s and also served in the Egyptian Campaign of 1801-2. He was promoted to sergeant after Talavera.

Lieutenant Archibald Leach, inexplicably known as "Cary" to his fellow subalterns. He joined the 1st Battalion in Malta as an ensign in 1803, serving in Italy where he fought at the Battle of Maida, before receiving a battlefield promotion to Lieutenant after the Battle of Talavera in 1809.

Corporal Ashley Down, Bristol born and bred and a former crew member on a Bristol Channel trow, Cpl. Down enlisted in in the 61st in 1804 to avoid being press-ganged into the Navy. He also fought at Maida and Talavera.

Tuesday, 18 August 2020

Another group of auxilia

I did a group without javelins, for variation, and I added in a couple of figures from the command sprue, based on the Cornicen and Signifer bodies.


I used the Imaginifer arm from the auxiliary cavalry set, because I thought it would make a nice variation to have an Imago for my cohort. I also gave the other body from the command sprue a gladius and a small parma shield (this is actually because I am running out of oval shields).

I have enough bodies left to make up another group and also another deployment point vignette. I shall have to stick these together and get them underoated.

Tuesday, 28 July 2020

Six more auxiliary cavalry

Well, I finished off my second group of six equites for my cohors equitata, and the rain held off long enough for me to varnish them. My DIY augury (would I see sparrows or magpies first if I looked out of the kitchen window?) worked for me. I shall continue to put out food for the sparrows.


I don't really need a tubicen but seeing as arms with a tuba (the Latin word for a trumpet) are included on the Victrix sprues, it seemed a shame to just ignore them. Similarly, I used an optio head for one of the equites, just for variety. I don't need an optio equitum either, but he looks nice in the group.


For a bit more variety, I have chosen a sword arm for one of these equites, and you will note that the middle one of these is wearing scale armour rather than mail. This is because each sprue in the set has one body in scale lorica, so it has to be used for ordinary troopers as well as leaders to make the most of the available models.

I have also chosen to give this group blue neckerchiefs, for variety. The first group I did have red ones. 

I have seven more horses and riders left (because I bought an extra pair of sprues on ebay to give me 20 equites in total), so I'll get them made up at some point, but I have no urgent need for them. When they are done, I'll have a second leader and one more group of six equites.

Sunday, 26 July 2020

Auxiliary cavalry

Wow, this was a rush job! I was worried that they wouldn't be finished ready for this afternoon. I couldn't varnish them until this morning because of rain and humidity.

First, we have a group of three Equites and a Decurio, the commander of a turma, that is to say, a group of 30 cavalry.


Here are the remaining three men in my group of six, as required for Infamy, Infamy, including a vexillarius. The standard isn't necessary for the rules, but it makes the unit stand out nicely.


These are intended as the cavalry component of my cohors equitata, the Cohors Primus Syldaviorum Equitata Luperci.

You will notice that their shields don't match those of the cohort's pedites, and that is because LBMS don't make the same design for the slightly smaller Victrix Roman cavalry shields. I suppose I could have cut the edges a bit smaller on some infantry shields, but I decided that the equites of the cohort were distinguished by a separate shield design. In actual fact, we don't know whether all members of a cohort would have carried identical shields anyway. It seems a reasonable assumption, but in the absence of any firm evidence, I think it gives us the opportunity to do what we see fit.

So, for the Cohors Primus Syldaviorum Equitata Luperci, I have decided that the turmae of equites would carry a separate design, which I shall justify by reference to the entirely invented Annales Syldaviorum of the little-known 2nd century writer Lucius Porcus Crustum, himself of Goganian origins, who lived in Istriodunum during the reign of Marcus Aurelius. 

In Book XIV of the Annales, he writes that "the turmae of the cohort of the Brothers of the Wolf were distinguished by their red shields which were decorated with entwined vines in flower, honouring the god Bacchus, Father of the Vines, known as Dionysos Eleutherios by the Greeks and Illyrians".

So, there we have it. Who could possibly disagree with L. Porcus Crustum?

Anyway, I have more cavalry to finish, which I will work on in groups of six, and eventually there will be two more groups and another separate character figure.

Thursday, 23 July 2020

The last group of auxiliary infantry (for the moment)

The last group? Well, yes, because I need to get on with the cavalry for my cohors equitata.

Here they are, pretty much looking the same as their comrades I've already posted;


I don't really have anything new to say about them, because everything has already been said.

I am currently working on some auxiliary cavalry, once again Victrix plastic ones, and I need to get at least one group of six plus their Decurio finished before Sunday, because the Lincombe Barn Wargames Society is back in action and I have a game planned for the 26th. I want some hooves on the table as well as caligae.

Tuesday, 21 July 2020

Eight more auxiliaries

The strength of the Cohors Primus Syldaviorum Equitata Luperci grows as eight more recruits are mustered before their Praefectus.


As you can see, I am now able to put these on their movement sabots from Warbases. I decided to do all of these carrying their javelins, mainly because it means I don't have to take a scalpel to their scabbards!

Once again, these are all Victrix plastic auxilia and the shield transfers are made by LBMS, and can be purchased from the Victrix website too. 

I now only have  one more group of eight auxiliaries to finish off and then I can start on my cavalry, who are all primed ready for painting.


Monday, 20 July 2020

Three more characters for my auxiliaries

These were a bit of an experiment, but I think they have worked OK.


Of course, when I say experiment, I mean a bit of very minor kitbashing. From left to right, they are a Capsarius, a sort of battlefield medic, an officer of some kind and another Optio, this one doing some kind of twirling thing with his staff.

The officer type and the Optio were made using two unwanted bodies from the command sprue in the Victrix EIR Auxilia set, and I rather like them because they are wearing the kind of lorica hamata with reinforced shoulders that we might associate more with legionary troops rather than auxiliaries. 

Because the figures are supposed to be a signifer and a cornicen, ordinary arms have to be selected carefully, hence the odd way the Optio is holding his staff.

I am thinking that the officer in the nice green cloak might come in handy as a tribunus angusticlavius, a junior military tribune from the Equestrian Order, who would make a nice Tribunus in the Infamy, Infamy campaign rules. I am sure that he will be a welcome addition to the Cohors Primus Syldaviorum Equitata Luperci. Anyway, he already has a name. He is Antonius Crispus Cerialis, from a prominent equestrian family with large estates to the west of Colonia Klovinus. The family is known for their wealth, their staunch support for Rome (whoever happens to be emperor) and their family motto, MAGNIS SUNT. The family has grown in wealth and social standing ever since the then paterfamilias Grabus Ientaculum Cerialis, a client of the gens Julia, was granted equestrian status for his support for Octavian in his wars against Mark Antony.

The Capsarius is a standard auxiliary figure with the addition of a pack from a Warlord Late War German Heer sprue that I trimmed a bit to remove most of the detail, adding a strap made from thin plastic card. I kept the water canteen, but trimmed off most of the detail to make it look like a pottery flask.

I have also received my movement sabots, so my next sets of figures will be based up ready for use.

Friday, 17 July 2020

More auxila leave the painting table

Well, they left the varnish spray booth (a large cardboard box with one side side removed) actually.


I really like these Victrix figures a lot. They have lots of detail, are fairly simply to assemble and the finished items paint up nicely, and it is easy to cut the tops off the scabbards on the figures holding gladii.

I have a couple more groups that I am working on at the moment, plus a couple more individual figures and I have also glued all my horses together, ready for undercoating. I will undercoat the riders separately, as soon as I have assembled them. I have enough mounted models to make up two groups of six, plus a decurio, which leaves me with three spares. To stop them going to waste, I have bought sprues of four more riders and horses from ebay, which will give me enough mounted auxiliaries for three groups plus two leaders. That will be a lot for Infamy, Infamy, but why not? There could be a scenario in future where I might need three groups of riders.

I've also got more infantry figures to assemble, including the spare command sprue figures. I don't need more signiferi etc, so I will experiment with these, to see if I can use the bodies to make up extra auxiliaries with different pattern lorica hamata (i.e mail shirts). The models with the muscle cuirasses will probably be surplus to requirements, but I will find a use for them somewhere.

Wednesday, 15 July 2020

Two more characters for Infamy, Infamy

Here are two more figures for my cohors equitata, a Signifer and a Cornicen.


These figures aren't really necessary to play the game, a Musician (i.e. the cornicen) is a Support option and standard bearers (signiferi) aren't mentioned at all, but I intend to put him to use because, when it comes down to it, why wouldn't I?  I could put him in one of my infantry groups, perhaps or maybe I could even use him as a Status I or II leader support choice

These chaps are wearing bear pelts over their lorica hamata, which was a mark of their status in the century and cohort. 

In real terms, each century had a signifer, but this looks like a far more important piece of kit, maybe the signum of the first century or possibly the signum for the whole cohort, which was carried by the vexillarius, one of the principales, the name used collectively for junior leaders below the rank of centurion.

There were various types of signa. There was the manus, a hand representing the soldier's oath of loyalty, the imago, a representation of the emperor, the vexillum, a rectangular cloth banner, the draco, a kind of windsock with a dragon head, used by cavalry units from the 2nd century onwards and the famous aquila, the sacred symbol of a legion, although auxiliary cohorts didn't have eagles.

The small round shields, a kind of buckler called a parmula, were associated with signiferi and others, like musicians who were carrying something that was cumbersome and which made a larger shield impractical. I have no idea how commonly-used they were in reality, but they look nice on the models. They were also used by the sort of gladiators known as Thraeces, i.e. "Thracians" and were the same kind of shields as were used by  the Velites of the Middle Republican period.

Annoyingly, having photographed them, I now notice the mould line across the mouth of the Cornu. I shall have to deal with that and probably paint the area a darker shade too.

Tuesday, 14 July 2020

More recruits for the cohors equitata

As it has stayed relatively dry, I have finished basing and varnished another group of auxiliaries.


As I wrote earlierthe (imaginary) Cohors Primus Syldaviorum Equitata had the additional cognomen Luperci ( i.e. the “Brothers of the Wolf”) because the Goganii were associated with a cult that venerated a wolf deity sometimes identified as Lykas, and this was reflected in the occasional wearing of wolf pelts as cloaks by some of the troops (actually a nice excuse to give a few of my Victrix minis the wolf pelts on  the sprues).

I have given these the shield arms with the short throwing javelins, because I like the way this looks, and I have all of these guys posed with their main javelins ready to throw. I can use these as skirmishers with Flexible Drill, and I can also mix in the slingers which I have already finished to create two groups with mixed weaponry, as shown below;


I think that this looks quite effective as a group too, but I'll be interested to hear what others think.

Sunday, 12 July 2020

Auxilia with slings

Now, in the Infamy, Infamy rules, the only slingers that are listed for the Early Imperial Romans are "Tribal Slingers", but because some of us were discussing Roman slingers on the Infamy Facebook page, I cobbled a group of eight together. I used arms with swords from my Victrix Auxilia sprues, cut the hands off and glued on slinger hands from the Gripping Beast "Dark Age Warriors" set, and here they are;


I think that slingers can be justified because the rules state that Roman Auxilia are equipped with Mixed Weapons, which are described as "The weapons of most Foot and Mounted Warriors and include swords, spears and javelins". I am thinking that "include" doesn't preclude the use of other weapons here. However, the rules also talk about Skirmish Troops, saying "These are named depending on the troop type and include slings, bows and javelins. This is their primary weapon". Now, I don't want to have any of my auxilia as "Skirmishing Troops", because that fundamentally goes against how the auxiliary cohorts operated. I just want an opportunity to give some of them the ability to use slings rather than javelins as ranged weapons, taking advantage of their Flexible Drill characteristic.

Of course, the next question is how can these guys be accommodated within the rules? Well one suggestion (made by David Hunter) is to define them as;

Auxilia with slings          Warriors                8 men. 
Medium Armour             Mixed Weapons    Slings
Aggressive Attack 2       Step Out 1             Drilled, Supra Numerum, Flexible Drill

and field them with the following proviso; 

They may only use slings when skirmishing and only half the men fire, because  loading their slings is hampered by the shields they carry.

That seems reasonable to me, but the alternative might just be to mix them in with a group of auxiliaries with javelins and ignore the fact that they have slings. Personally, I prefer the first idea, but I suppose that it is up to my opponents if they are happy to play against auxiliary slingers.


Friday, 10 July 2020

Infamy, Infamy - the Auxilia have got it in for me!

Well, I have been painting away frantically all week to try and get some of my Victrix Romans completed, and now, as we have a dry day, I have managed to varnish the first few completed figures.

I have done two small vignettes to serve as Deployment and Ambush points, and also two Leaders.

First up, here is my Centurio, Julius Magnus Gallus, and his faithful Optio, Lucius Esox.


Note that their plumes are black. This is to represent the famous feathers of the Syldavian Black Pelican, noted by Herodotus as being sought after for helmet plumes, as mentioned in an earlier post.

Next, giving me an opportunity to use the arms with severed heads, flaming torches and heads on spears, I have done a deployment point and an ambush point marker.


The large dog is actually a Warbases 28mm wolf. I see the figures on these bases as being Exploratores returning from a mission into enemy territory, and coming back with trophies to prove that they contacted some barbarian foes.

These are the start of my Cohors Equitata force, the Cohors Primus Syldaviorum Equitata Luperci, raised from the Illyrian Goganii of north-western Syldavia during the imperium of Augustus Caesar. It is believed that this cohort was raised by Tiberius sometime after his campaigns in Pannonia, known as the Bellum Batonianum

Wednesday, 24 June 2020

Early Imperial Roman Auxilia

As a preparation for my next big painting project for the TooFatLardies Infamy, Infamy rules, I wrote up a backstory for the Auxiliary Cohort that I will be assembling from the excellent plastic Victrix Early Imperial Infantry and Cavalry Auxilia sets.






My plan is to create a force based on a cohors equitata quingenaria, which was a mixed cohort of 600 men, 480 infantry and 120 cavalry. 

Although the Romans had long used auxiliary units recruited from allied tribal groups bordering on or from within the empire itself, these were never formally incorporated into the structure of the army. However, from the time of Augustus onward, auxiliary cohorts became a regular part of Roman armies, and were fully integrated into the Roman system. The auxiliary cohorts were recruited from  the class of people known as peregrini, that is to say from the free non-citizens of the provinces of the empire.

I decided that instead of basing my troops on any existing historical unit, I would place their origins in my imagi-nation of Syldavia.

Roman Syldavia

History tells us very little about the peoples of pre-Roman Syldavia. A fragment of a lost work attributed to Herodotus records that black pelican feathers from the Land of the Sylvans were much sought out for helmet plumes in Greece and that the tribes of the country were “warlike, tall, well-built and fond of feasting, hunting and drinking in the manner of the ancient heroes of the long-haired Achaeans”, that their lords lived in “great hill-top palaces girt with tall walls built by the Cyclopes” and that the people honoured “Chthonic gods unknown to the citizens of the cities of Hellas”.

Sometime around 337 BCE: Alexander the Great is said to have campaigned against a  number of tribes of the region. These were recorded as being the Goganidae, the Calippians and the Donantae, these being the Greek names for the tribes. The Romans later knew them as the Goganii, Calippii and Donantii.                           

In 281 BCE, an army sent by King Pyrrhus of Epirus is said to have been defeated by the Goganidae in a battle in a place called Xalippium. This site has never been definitively identified, although it has tentatively been linked to a site on the plans about 30 km east of the modern city of Travunje, where archaeologists have uncovered what appear to be the remains of a battle of the Hellenistic period.

In 87 BCE, the Roman period begins when the tribes of the northern regions along the valley of the River Trebjesa and southern Zympathia are defeated and subjugated by the legions of Gaius Hilarius Pollo. A number of oppida were besieged and reduced in the modern provinces of Zympathia and Wladruja and the Goganii and Donantii submit to Roman rule. In the following year, Bestus, king of the Calippii (Rex Calippiorum) submitted to Rome and most of the coastal littoral and the lowland interior of modern Syldavia was absorbed into the Empire as the two provinces of  Syldavia Superior and Syldavia Inferior. The cities (colonia) of Klovinus (Klow) and Istriodunum (later Istrow, modern Istow) were founded by veterans of Legio XXXXII Invictus.
                                                                                     
During the Civil Wars of the First Triumvirate, both Syldavian provinces were controlled by Julius Caesar, who recruited auxiliary troops from the peregrini of Syldavia, the warlike Goganii of the north being considered amongst the best of his allied contingents.

After the death of Caesar, the Syldavian provinces came initially under the control of Brutus, but following the Treaty of Brundisium in 40 BCE, they became part of the possessions of Lepidus. After Lepidus was deposed and exiled by Octavian, the inland portions of Syldavia were absorbed into the empire, as a result of Octavian’s campaigns in the Balkans and the two provinces were then much enlarged. The colonia of Klovinus had been partially razed during these campaigns but was rebuilt by the provincial governor, Marcus Totalis Nervus in 39 BCE.

In the years following the assumption of imperial power by Octavian as the Emperor Augustus, both Syldavian provinces prospered and became integrated into the empire. During the Augustan period six cohorts of auxiliary troops were raised in the provinces. These consisted of four cohortes equitate quingenarie (i.e. a mixed unit of 480 infantry 120 and cavalry, totalling 600 men), one cohors peditata milliara (800 infantry) and one ala milliara (720 cavalry).

These were named as;

Cohors Primus Syldaviorum equitata Luperci
Cohors Secundus Syldaviorum equitata
Cohors Tertius Syldaviorum equitata
Cohors Primus Calippii equitata
Cohors Primus Syldaviorum peditata
Ala  Primus Donantorum                                                                                 

All of these units are recorded as still being in existence in the 4th century, in a little-known addendum to the Notitia dignitatum, known as the Notitia Syldaviorum (a document that should not be confused with a text dating to the 8th century known as the Notitia Syldaviarum). In this text, the Ala Donantorum is categorised as being equites clibanarii, which indicates that at some point in the unit’s existence it was converted into heavily-armoured cavalry.

Little is known about the deployments of any of these auxiliary cohorts, although it has been suggested that the three cohortes Syldaviorum equitatae were present in the Dacian campaigns of Trajan and that the first cohort may have been part of the Roman garrison in Britain during the second half of the 1st century and, together with the second cohort also served in Germania in the 1st and early 2nd centuries. A partially legible funerary inscription found in northern Syria in the 1930s contains the following;
M. HOSTILIUS GAVIA. OPTIO III COHORS S...........M
Which some have taken as evidence that the Cohors III Syldaviorum equitata could have been stationed in Syria Coele at that time.                                                                                                                                                                                                                   
It is recorded that the initial recruitment for the first cohort was exclusively from among the Goganii, a tribal grouping living in an area roughly contiguous with modern Zympathia, Hum and Wladruja, and associated with a cult that venerated a wolf deity sometimes called Lykas, and this was reflected in the occasional wearing of wolf pelts as cloaks by some of the troops, as well as the sobriquet Luperci, i.e. “Brothers of the Wolf” attached to the name of the cohort. The 2nd century Roman author, Gnaeus Populus Silvus, of Goganian origins himself, connected the traditional cult with the Roman festival of Lupercalia and the Roman deity Lubercus.

Similarly, the fourth cohors equitata from Syldavia was named the Cohors Primus Calippii equitata because it was initially recruited from the Greek-speaking Calippians of southern Syldavia Inferior, who lived in an area stretching north from modern Cataro (Roman Castrum Caetarus) to the valley of the River Wladir (ancient name uncertain, but suggested to be Vallidos or Ballidos) and west as far as the modern Travunje.

The ethnic  composition of the remaining cohorts is presumed to have been mixed, apart from the all-cavalry Ala Donantorum, which was raised from the Donantii, a group of tribes who appear to have inhabited a large area covering the modern day provinces of Moltuja and Polishov, centred around the modern city of Istow. Roman Istriodunum was built on the site of a large oppidum which was probably the “capital” of the Donantii. Numerous objects of Illyrian and Scythian origins have been found at various times by archaeologists working in the extensive ruins of Roman Istriodunum, which has been preserved because the site was never reoccupied after its abandonment in the 4th century.

Thus, we can see that Roman Syldavia was inhabited by three main tribal groups,  the Goganii in the west and north west, the Donantii in the centre and north-east and the Calipii in the south and south-east.

                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                           
                                                                                                                                                                                                                       
                                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                                               

                                                                                         
  

Thursday, 18 June 2020

Infamy, Infamy

Some people, mainly those of us who are Followers of the Lard, have eagerly been awaiting the arrival of ToofatLardies new rules for large skirmish games set in the Julian and Earlier Imperial Roman periods. Well, the wait is over. Advanced orders are now being taken over on the TooFatLardies website.


The image shown above is the actual artwork for the official rulebook, painted by famous military artist, Chris Collingwood. It is an image called "Breaking the Line AD 73" and represents a battle from the period when Petillius Cerialis campaigned in northern Britain against the Brigantes, Parisi or Carveti in that year. 

All advanced order entries will be entered into a draw to win a signed copy of a highly limited edition print, one of only 10 produced.

You can read all about the rules on the Lard Island blog;

Infamy, Infamy! is a game that will, ultimately, be divided into three parts.  This is the first rule book which covers Rome’s conflicts with the western barbarian between 60 BC and AD 100.  Covered in the rules are lists for Late Republican forces that can be used for Caesar and his campaigns in Gaul and Britannia and against the German tribes raiding across the Rhine.  The Early Imperial Roman lists are perfect for the conquest of Britannia under Claudius and the continuing campaigns through to Agricola’s conquest of the North and beyond.  The British lists cover the period from Caesar’s invasions through to Mons Graupius, including lists for Boudicca’s revolt.  Gallic lists cover the classic period of conquest of the Gallic Wars with the Belgea and Aquitani represented and make every effort to reflect the more advanced culture of the Gauls. The Germans, on the other hand, are the ultimate Barbarians, with lists for the tribes of the Rhineland and those of the dark forests of Germania Magna and for the Batavian Revolt.
I now need to actually make a start on my Victrix Early Imperial Roman Auxiliary Infantry and Cavalry for my planned force, which will represent troops of a Cohors Equitata Quinquagenaria, a mixed auxiliary force of both foot and mounted troops, of the kind that was widely used in the Principate across the Empire, and which was stationed along or near the limes, the borders of the Empire.

Recruited from the peregrini, that is non-citizens living inside the empire, the Auxilia became increasingly important during the 1st and 2nd centuries, with auxiliary cohorts forming at least half of the empire's fighting power in the 2nd century.