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Ballista with Hellenistic crew battery
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Ballista with Hellenistic crew battery

Ballista with Hellenistic crew battery

Under Philip II and his son Alexander the Great, siege trains began to feature more prominently in hellenistic warfare. This trend continued among Alexander's successors, with their most famous proponent being Demetrius the Besieger and his famed, though unsuccessful Siege of Rhodes in 305-304 BC. Loaded with bolts or stone 'shot' the ballista was a highly accurate weapon (there are many accounts right from its early history of single soldiers being picked off by the operators). Now featuring Hellenistic crews, Macedonian and Hellenistic Greek armies can add these engines of war to the tabletop and rain down destruction on their foes!

Miniature sculpted by Toma Axelsson. Studio Miniatures painted by Andres Amian.

Models supplied unassembled and unpainted

$44.10

Original: $126.00

-65%
Ballista with Hellenistic crew battery—

$126.00

$44.10

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Ballista with Hellenistic crew battery

Under Philip II and his son Alexander the Great, siege trains began to feature more prominently in hellenistic warfare. This trend continued among Alexander's successors, with their most famous proponent being Demetrius the Besieger and his famed, though unsuccessful Siege of Rhodes in 305-304 BC. Loaded with bolts or stone 'shot' the ballista was a highly accurate weapon (there are many accounts right from its early history of single soldiers being picked off by the operators). Now featuring Hellenistic crews, Macedonian and Hellenistic Greek armies can add these engines of war to the tabletop and rain down destruction on their foes!

Miniature sculpted by Toma Axelsson. Studio Miniatures painted by Andres Amian.

Models supplied unassembled and unpainted

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Under Philip II and his son Alexander the Great, siege trains began to feature more prominently in hellenistic warfare. This trend continued among Alexander's successors, with their most famous proponent being Demetrius the Besieger and his famed, though unsuccessful Siege of Rhodes in 305-304 BC. Loaded with bolts or stone 'shot' the ballista was a highly accurate weapon (there are many accounts right from its early history of single soldiers being picked off by the operators). Now featuring Hellenistic crews, Macedonian and Hellenistic Greek armies can add these engines of war to the tabletop and rain down destruction on their foes!

Miniature sculpted by Toma Axelsson. Studio Miniatures painted by Andres Amian.

Models supplied unassembled and unpainted

Ballista with Hellenistic crew battery | Warlord Games US & ROW