Essling Schloss
As I mentioned in Post 197, I needed three feature buildings for the
village of Essling. With the Schloßkapelle completed, I transferred my
efforts to the Schloss itself.
From the information I’d managed to unearth, a settlement where
Essling now stands was first mentioned around 1250. The centre of
the village was probably a farm, which in 1378 was turned into a
fortification. In the future centuries, this stronghold was turned into
the elegant chateau and grounds that formed, in John Gill’s words,
“an excellent defensive position” for Napoleon’s troops. The
defensive benefits were mainly due to the walled formal garden and
the walled dairy to the rear of the chateau. Like the chapel, the Schloss
was badly damaged in 1809 and therefore didn’t avoid real fighting.
I could only allow my model a frontage of something like 65mm.
Total Battle Miniatures produced a suitable model – their Grand
Town Building with Pillared Entrance. I had the model in my
collection but, unfortunately, even at only 80mm wide, it was large
enough to badly reduce the number of other models I could fit in my
village with its 200mm-square footprint.
So I set about designing my own chateau. I based it on the present
Essling Schloss: a substantial building with 14 windows on the upper
floor of its facade. I reduced these to only five. I thought it was
important to make sure and keep a central window above the
entrance. In place of the present municipal clock, I designed a shield
of stone with the Essling coat of arms carved on. I was keen that the
building had a passage leading from the main street to the garden at
the rear of the property, and to include a couple of doors in the
corridor.
ABOVE I painted the difficult-to-get-at bits of the model
and the windows first before assembling the model.
POST 208
208