Damn. I saw this a bit too late.
Damn. I saw this a bit too late.
Cassivelanus
TGA archive http://files.filefront.com/Cassivela.../fileinfo.html
Absolutely great! I guess we will have to make a patch to add the last portraits. They really deserve it!
Wow...
I have unsticked this post since most of the portraits are included in the new version of 58BC. which can be found here:
F.R.R.E CD ROM
Some mistakes in 77 BC:
Sertorius have vanilla portrait, but his portrait haves now Gaius Cassius Longinus
Portrait of Pompeus have two persons: Pompeus and Quintus Lutatius Catulus
I started to work to translate 77ВC to russian language:
Translated text of scripted missions in 77 BC
http://files.filefront.com/export+advicetx...;/fileinfo.html
Hey, Kozak. It is really curious as I tested it. The only thing that comes to my mind is that when I deleted the map.rwm file, the game assigned another portrait to Sertorius. Anyway, I will give a look at it and try to fix it in the next patch.
Concerning two characters having the same portrait, I am afraid that this is unavoidable. In fact, the portrait of Tigran is also assigned to a Parthian governor (in Carmania, if I remember correctly). If we had based the mod on Alexander TW there would not be these kind of problems. But, of course, we would be missing another features, like the hordes.
Good luck with the translations!
In the 77BC used new portrait of Caesar, but in 58BC uses a old portrait
Old New
if you more like the new portrait, you can replace this portrait in 58BC
Just download from
http://files.filefront.com/Caesar+TG.../fileinfo.html
and locate the folder "Portraits" from archive with new Caesar in ....Rome - Total War\58bc\data\ui\roman
I combined the old and the new one.
I use the new for the younger years of Caesar and then the older one from the old portrait.
To portray that he was not that bald when he was in his 40's
thought he was going bald but sources say that he comb his hair to the front so he could hide it. and then during the civil wars, when he was already in his 50's, the old portrait would be apropriate.
Younger
Then older
Last edited by Octavius Vatco; August 07, 2008 at 01:25 PM.
Hey, Octavius. As we had two portraits, both of them superb, I decided to use both of them. But I like your combination too
Is this Cato the Elder ? He had red hair !
http://penelope.uchicago.edu/Thayer/...to_Major*.html
Red-haired, snapper and biter, his grey eyes flashing defiance, Porcius, come to the shades, back will be thrust by their Queen.
[SIGPIC][/SIGPIC]
Cato Censorius (or as you say, the Elder) lived 234 -149 BCE.
Plutarch does indeed write:
As for his outward appearance, he had reddish hair, and keen grey eyes
However this is a portrait of Cato Uticensis, the great-grandson of Cato Censorius, whose hair colour I believe, like most figures in Roman history is entirely unknown to us; although Dante (doubtless inspired by Plutarch 53.1) writes in the Divine Comedy:
I saw close by me a solitary old man, worthy, by his appearance, of so much reverence that never son owed father more. Long was his beard and mixed with white hair, similar to the hairs of his head
I always wondered how does bucelarii manage to get so exact quotes in so little time...
I believe if we ask him to describe the regular food that the gauls had during the siege of Alesia he will tell us exactly the ingredients....
does he have a catalogued set of quotes with millions of tags?
is he a reincarnation of Plutarch, Cassius dio, Edward Gibbons and Aristoteles?
questions... so many questions...
You give me far too much credit buddy!
In reality I possess a quite terrible memory. However all this work on FRRE has at least helped me to find my way around the primary sources a lot quicker than I could previously
It also helps to own a pretty decent collection of secondary souces with excellent footnotes. Why do you think in the Developer's Forum I regularly refer back to historians such as P A Brunt or A N Sherwin-White etc
wonderful portraits
Greetings to all
Quinctilius Varus
Code:Is this Cato the Elder ? He had red hair !
It is portrait of Cato Younger. What color at him hair - I do not know.
By the way, I have specially “dressed” him in a black toga without tunic. His this feature have well noticed in a serial "Rome"
Excuse me for my bad English
Hey..... LC7... its the person himself.... welcome........
Octavius Vatco
Yes, I too shall be hereCode:Hey..... LC7... its the person himself.... welcome........
Thanks