If the Normans are so smart how come their castles are always miles from the airports? Eh eh?Great forethought by those Normans to include an ANZAC cemetary
What's on your workbench?
- MarshalNey
- Gaynor
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Re: What's on your workbench?
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- Grizzly Madam
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Re: What's on your workbench?
What are you blethering about, tower is right next to london city, and windsor is barely a stones throw from heathrow.MarshalNey wrote: ↑Wed Apr 14, 2021 3:56 pmIf the Normans are so smart how come their castles are always miles from the airports? Eh eh?Great forethought by those Normans to include an ANZAC cemetary
Re: What's on your workbench?
Some more SYW French cavalry done, barring some of the bases still to be finished:
Above: (L to R) Regiments Saluces, Penthievre and Bussy-Lameth.
Above: (L to R) Regiments Volontaires-Liegeois, Bourbon & Beauvilliers.
Again, these were tiny regiments.
Above: (L to R) Regiments Saluces, Penthievre and Bussy-Lameth.
Above: (L to R) Regiments Volontaires-Liegeois, Bourbon & Beauvilliers.
Again, these were tiny regiments.
My wargames blog: http://www.jemimafawr.co.uk/
Re: What's on your workbench?
Very nice too. Small things, good packages or was it....
On the graveyard thing & heavenly hell, there's a lot of concern there from some heathen non believers. Being a Methodist, I'm secure in the knowledge that there'll be a committee looking into it all.
Graves - generally East/West, there would have been pre Henry Brexit churchyards, certainly not many Catholic ones afterwards, if any. I suppose your church models will depend upon your period. Of wargaming. A local Papist tells me that there wasn't any Catholic churches (in England) after 1530ish until Victorian times, when they built a few. A lot of church variation in the Protestant side came from the 1630s(?) with the Puritans, various Methodists later on, (high & low & Chapel) and various non conformist who didn't want to conform with the regular non conformists. None of whom had graveyards, so far as I know. But, as is usual, you can always just please yourself, in any case, and do what suits you. You could even have a circular graveyard, facing inwards, doing the old hokey kokey, from the ancient hokey cokeist tribes.
On the graveyard thing & heavenly hell, there's a lot of concern there from some heathen non believers. Being a Methodist, I'm secure in the knowledge that there'll be a committee looking into it all.
Graves - generally East/West, there would have been pre Henry Brexit churchyards, certainly not many Catholic ones afterwards, if any. I suppose your church models will depend upon your period. Of wargaming. A local Papist tells me that there wasn't any Catholic churches (in England) after 1530ish until Victorian times, when they built a few. A lot of church variation in the Protestant side came from the 1630s(?) with the Puritans, various Methodists later on, (high & low & Chapel) and various non conformist who didn't want to conform with the regular non conformists. None of whom had graveyards, so far as I know. But, as is usual, you can always just please yourself, in any case, and do what suits you. You could even have a circular graveyard, facing inwards, doing the old hokey kokey, from the ancient hokey cokeist tribes.
Re: What's on your workbench?
Ta! Sadly, bloody awful things came in two-squadron packages...Peeler wrote: ↑Wed Apr 14, 2021 9:44 pm Very nice too. Small things, good packages or was it....
On the graveyard thing & heavenly hell, there's a lot of concern there from some heathen non believers. Being a Methodist, I'm secure in the knowledge that there'll be a committee looking into it all.
Graves - generally East/West, there would have been pre Henry Brexit churchyards, certainly not many Catholic ones afterwards, if any. I suppose your church models will depend upon your period. Of wargaming. A local Papist tells me that there wasn't any Catholic churches (in England) after 1530ish until Victorian times, when they built a few. A lot of church variation in the Protestant side came from the 1630s(?) with the Puritans, various Methodists later on, (high & low & Chapel) and various non conformist who didn't want to conform with the regular non conformists. None of whom had graveyards, so far as I know. But, as is usual, you can always just please yourself, in any case, and do what suits you. You could even have a circular graveyard, facing inwards, doing the old hokey kokey, from the ancient hokey cokeist tribes.
Non-Conformists have cemeteries too. The chapels have all got 'em around here (either around the chapel or in a detached plot down the road). Cremation wasn't legal until the late 19th Century, so they had to stick 'em somewhere. My grandparents are in a (North-facing) Baptist cemetery and a load of my relatives are just up the road in another Baptist (west-facing) cemetery. My local 13th Century Anglican Church and its associated graveyard faces Northeast (toward the rising midsummer sun perhaps?).
My wargames blog: http://www.jemimafawr.co.uk/
- grizzlymc
- Grizzly Madam
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Re: What's on your workbench?
Nice Donkey walloper, I must be strong and buy no 6mm tricornes.
Re: What's on your workbench?
In the welsh valleys the burial grounds were sometimes up on the surrounding hills. Apparently one of my ancestors was a maid servant for Dr Price of cremation fame ...
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- Grizzly Madam
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Re: What's on your workbench?
I like methodists, and baptists. Especially the tea total part.
Leaves more for the likes of me to drink.
Leaves more for the likes of me to drink.