Woman-at-arms with bows and Woman-at-arms with axes from Lake-Town / Esgaroth (Unreleased Miniatures)

 

Hello!

A long, long time ago (exactly 6 years ago) I painted these models, however they didn't get the photos they deserved.
The metal miniatures come from two sets from Unreleased Miniatures
*The miniatures were recently put up for a charity auction, where they were auctioned off for a good amount!

Esgaroth, or Lake-town, is a fictitious community of Men upon the Long Lake which appears in the 1937 novel The Hobbit by J. R. R. Tolkien. Constructed entirely of wood and standing upon wooden pillars sunk into the lake-bed, the town is south of the Lonely Mountain and east of Mirkwood. The town's prosperity is apparently built upon trade between the Men (descendants of the Edain and thus distant cousins of the Dúnedain of Gondor), Elves and Dwarves of northern Middle-earth.

       Esgaroth and Lake-town may have been separate settlements established on the same site, one predating Smaug's destruction of Dale and Erebor and the other built afterwards. There is mention in The Hobbit of "old pilings of a greater town" that could be seen at low tide.


       Esgaroth appears to be a city-state, always independent of Dale, and a republic with no king (the only real republic shown in Middle-earth). The people had always elected from among the old and wise the Master of Lake-town and did "not [endure] the rule of mere fighting men".


       In the year 2941 of the Third Age the town was attacked by the dragon Smaug, but Bard the Bowman, who had indirectly learned of a weakness in Smaug's armour that had first been noticed by Bilbo Baggins, slew the dragon. The town was wrecked by the dragon, but afterwards it was rebuilt in a different location using some of the treasure that Smaug had stolen, though the town's Master ran off with some of the gold. Part of the town's population followed Bard to resettle the Kingdom of Dale.


       As a trading people, the Men of Esgaroth knew the Common Speech, Westron. Amongst themselves they spoke an ancient form of it, which was loosely related to but distinct from the also-ancient language of the Rohirrim. Tolkien "translated" Westron into English in his text, so to represent the ancient relative of it that the Rohirrim spoke, he substituted Old English. Thus, Tolkien substituted Old Norse for the language of the Men of Esgaroth (in person and place names, etc.) because it is an ancient relative of Old English (of which Modern English is largely derived).


       Master of Lake-town is the title given to the elected leader of Esgaroth. The Master of the town when Bilbo and Thorin's Company arrived in The Hobbit was portrayed as capable, but more than a little greedy and cowardly. His name was never given, although he earned the unpopular title "money bags" later. He was one of the few people in the town who did not eagerly welcome Bilbo and the Dwarves, fearing reprisal from the Wood Elf King. When Lake-town was destroyed by Smaug, the Master was largely held accountable, especially since he was one of the first to flee. Bard the Bowman, who had slain the dragon, was the hero of the people but he refused to seize control, insisting on working with the Master who did all he could to shift the blame onto the Dwarves.


       Master of Lake-town, played by Stephen Fry in Peter Jackson's The Desolation of Smaug

The Master did not fight in the Battle of Five Armies. Instead, he stayed behind to direct the rebuilding of the town. Afterwards Bard gave much gold to the Master for the people of the town, but the Master fell under "dragon sickness" and kept the gold for himself, fleeing Long Lake only to die of starvation in the wastes. It was afterward stated by Balin that a new Master had been elected who was wiser.










Quoting or copying the following text and photos remember the author

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Comments

  1. Beautiful work on these feisty ladies Michal!

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  2. Super malowanie tych odważnych dziewcząt Michał.
    Pozdr
    Tomasz

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  3. Nie pamiętam tych figurek... ale pomalowałeś je elegancko, można się oddawać w niewolę.

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    1. Cieszę się, że się podobają! Rzeźby miały trochę krzywizn ale jako tako wyszło malowanie :-)

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  4. Replies
    1. Glad you like it!
      I need to get used to your new Avatar! Haha :-)

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  5. Lovely painting as always Michal!

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  6. Very nice group of violent femmes mate.

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  7. Lovely lady warriors Michal. Each one a superb masterpiece.

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    1. Thank you very much for a kind words Dean!
      Warm regards

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  8. To chyba jest jedwab? Przynajmniej tak wygląda. Niesamowity efekt, wow! Szczęśliwy ten, kto teraz posiada te figurki ;)

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  9. Absolutely beautiful paint jobs.

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  10. Beautiful! Why hadn't we seen them before? They are gorgeous!

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  11. Wow Michal ... lovely and beautiful work!

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  12. Bardzo fajne malowanie, podoba mi się. :)

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  13. What a good choice of colors, the fringes on the skirt, that red and green, contrast great with the main tone of the garments. And thank you very much for making the ministures known, I did not know them.

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  14. Zadziwiasz mnie (w pozytywnym znaczeniu tego słowa) ilością i różnorodnością projektów!

    Nawet nie wiedziałem, że takie figurki powstały, tak swoją drogą.

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    1. W kolejce na kolejne miesiące czekają już oldhammery, LOTRY, Krzyżaki i kilka różnorodności jeszcze większych :)

      Ilość projektów to jakieś przekleństwo ale powoli kończę com zaczął :-)

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