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Bosworth 1485 - My kingdom for a horse

Posted by krugi3 on 27 Mar 2021, 15:55

Hello!

After my last large diorama (Mylae) now back with a small one. Inspired by William Shakespeare's famous play "Richard III." with the even more famous quote "My kingdom for a horse".

Historical Background
The struggle for power in medieval England culminated in the Wars of the Roses (1455 - 1485), the name derived from the badges of the two leading parties - the house of Lancaster (red rose) and the house of York (white rose). In the year 1485 Richard III. of the house of York was the king of England and had to deal with Henry Tudor, Earl of Richmond, of the house of Lancaster. The two armies met at Bosworth for the decisive battle. After a bitter fighting Richard lost his life and throne and Henry became the new regent, founding the house of Tudor (the badge being a white rose within a red rose), which ruled England for the next 118 years.

The moment depicted is the final stand by Richard III. with his last few men. The scene happened after a cavalry charge spearheaded by Richard failed and he and his men were partly driven into marshland. After losing his horse from exhaustion and wounds the famous quote by William Shakespeare "A horse! A horse! My kingdom for a horse!" should have happened here. He wanted his horse not for fleeing but for reentering combat on horseback (so the legend says). The pursuing Lancastrian foot soldiers chased after the retreating Yorkist knights and killed them one after the other. Richard's standard bearer holds his banner high till the last moment, although he had lost both legs. Finally the king was overwhelmed and perished.

The diorama
The figures are from MiniArt (very flat) and the horse from Airfix. The positioning of the figures was quite difficult for not creating a strange looking effect owing to their flatness. The horse was a major conversion as it is orginally for a british hussar of Waterloo.
I was unable to find a satisfying description how English marshland in the 15th century really looked like, so several modern day pictures were the base for the recreation. As there are many different kinds of marshes, this is only one possible approach.
The marshland was made of MIG texture dark mud, MIG acrylic water clear, Faller foliage and grass, Busch reed and some colour variations.

Here can see the final diorama:
Video: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mQ_T6yN5veU
Pictures: http://tkr172.blogspot.com/

And here a few teasers:

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Greetings from Austria
Thomas Krug
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krugi3  Austria
 
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Posted by Peter on 27 Mar 2021, 17:54

Nice little vignette again! :thumbup:
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Peter  Belgium

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Posted by sberry on 27 Mar 2021, 18:31

Peter wrote:Nice little vignette again! :thumbup:

Yes, a very nice scene! And as always, your photography creates the feeling of real action.
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sberry  Germany
 
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Posted by T. Dürrschmidt on 27 Mar 2021, 19:17

Desperatly surrounded….very good historical scene.
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T. Dürrschmidt  Germany
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Posted by Wiking on 27 Mar 2021, 20:41

Yes, a nice vignette.
I do not know the historical background.

The one with the knife ... believe very strong in the cross I think.
Not that I am do not think that he is a well experienced fighter ...
but a bit short in weapons and a little bit lonely.

And the ugly "stick" in his mates foot do not improve my hope for his victory.
But who will know ...

Simple but effective is that they are all dirty from the mud all around. :yeah:

:yeah:
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Wiking  Germany
 
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Posted by Michael Robert on 27 Mar 2021, 23:28

Hello Krugi3
good diorama with a good topic, nicely executed.... I mean the King, no Richard, no the dio,...
Actually, for English marsh the colour is too light, too reddish. Should be more bogged down. Marshes have this kind of rotten aura.
I agree with the flat figures, and you used them well. When I use such I try to bend them into a somewhat more 3-dimensional figure. Often that works quite well.
Keep up the great work
Cheers
Michael
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Michael Robert  France

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Posted by wilberforcefrog on 27 Mar 2021, 23:55

That poor, poor horse. But a very good display
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wilberforcefrog  United States of America
 
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Posted by Germanicus on 28 Mar 2021, 00:43

what did you use to create the horse's armour?
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Germanicus  Italy
 
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Posted by C M Dodson on 28 Mar 2021, 08:00

Very nice indeed.

Your web site is a treasure trove!

Best wishes,

Chris
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Posted by krugi3 on 28 Mar 2021, 12:49

For the conversion of the horse this was used:

Large armour pieces: divider strip cardboard (very thin and fexible)
Decorations on armour: putty
Smaller armour pieces at the neck: paper.
Saddle cantle: divider strip cardboard
Saddle blanket, reins and straps: paper
Stirrup: wire.
Arrow: wire and a little putty

All in all 20 extra parts were added.
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krugi3  Austria
 
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Posted by krugi3 on 28 Mar 2021, 13:03

Here you can find some pics of the conversions:
https://www.geschichte-in-miniaturen.de ... f=27&t=967
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krugi3  Austria
 
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Posted by Bill Slavin on 28 Mar 2021, 14:18

A lovely little diorama and a very nice conversion on the horse's armour. I'm always fascinated by flags - it looks hand-painted, and if so, very fine work indeed!
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Bill Slavin  Canada

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Posted by Germanicus on 28 Mar 2021, 15:36

Oh wow thank you very much!
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Germanicus  Italy
 
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Posted by Santi Pérez on 31 Mar 2021, 18:37

It's a fantastic masterpiece, krugi3. :notworthy: :notworthy: :notworthy:

Congratulations. :thumbup:

Santi.
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Santi Pérez  Spain
 
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