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Mythical Realms Vienna Treaty Wars wargaming

Fauxterre 1816 Part 4 – The Battle of Kloster Arens

19th March 1816 somewhere in western Zarland.

After the clash of advance guards it was now the turn of the Zarland and VinAlban main bodies to seek to control the River Hase.

The River Hase passes the Kloster Arens on its eastern bank ridge while on the west bank is the Arensburg and its no less imposing Rittergut.

The Royal Zarland Army was commanded by General Kratzen an above average General whose chief of staff General Klettern was in fact an outstanding Officer.

As dawn breaks the Zarland pickets see movement on the west bank of the River Hase
General Sumpf has elected to hold what he has – Kloster Arens and keeps his few forces east of the River Hase

The VinAlban army was commanded by General Geflugel (an average general) who had been delayed along the route of the march. General Modistin commanded the Davarian force sent to support Prince Otto’s latest attempt on his fathers crown. Modistin was a poor general and very much concerned with his own importance. General Geflugel had sent his Chief of Staff General Nelke (an above average commander) to meet Modistin and try to contain the unreliable General until he could arrive.

Both Zarland and VinAlban forces descend into the river valley
The Davarians are on the right flank, south of Kloster Arens and in force

The VinAlban and Zarland commanders had broken up their main bodies so as to push on to support their advance guards.

General Klettern had arrived with

  • 7th Cavalry
  • 5th Artillery

He sent these north west beyond Kloster Arens as it appeared the enemy were massing to cross the river Hase. General Sumpf had also mentioned the defeated VinAlbans had retreated north the previous evening – no doubt back onto their main body?

General Nelke had likewise brought some troops to reinforce the advance guard of General Stute. He had

  • 10th Infantry battalion
  • 2nd and 3rd Artillery
  • 4th Cavalry
  • 11th Skirmishers

General Nelke dispatched General Stute north with part of this force as reports had been received of enemy movements from that direction.

He then pushed a force across the river Hase in readiness for the arrival of General Geflugel and the main body. Its orders were to secure the flat ground north of Kloster Arens.

The force comprised

  • 4th Cavalry
  • 12th Infantry
  • 10th Infantry
  • 3rd Artillery

He then rode to meet General Modistin who had already arrived from the south west with a substantial force of Davarian troops.

both sides are bold with their artillery!

Earlier at 0400 am General Sumpf again sent patrols north to check on the VinAlbans whose advance guard had withdrawn in that direction the previous day. The 19th of March had dawned very cloudy but still dry. General Kratzen would soon arrive with the main Royal Zarland army.

The forces gather their courage
It is the Davarians who are across the river first as the VinAlban 4th cavalry also begin their crossing

General Klettern had in fact arrived earlier to take over from General Sumpf who took some rest in the Kloster Arens. General Klettern had been surprised to see not just VinAlbans across the Hase river valley but Davarians. He had immediately sent a courier to General Kratzen to hasten forward.

Vin Albans cross north of Kloster Arens as the first attack is made directly by the Davarians on Kloster Arens itself. Ouch!
Today the artillery are seemingly ineffective
General Nelke watches as the assault on Kloster Arens develops
Vin Alban skirmishers and infantry take artillery hits as the Davarians attack across the old sawmill bridge to the south

On the west side of the valley General Modistin had arrived at the Rittergut, meeting General Nelke and immediately demanded to know where General Geflugel was.

General Modistin was noted as a poor General yet he had sent his forces straight into attack showing an unexpected degree of boldness. General Nelke viewed the developing frontal attack with dismay.

The combined VinAlban and Davarian forces had descended the valley and made for the Kloster Arens and its ridge.

Finally both sides begin to see the attrition build from firing exchanges
The Davarians are seemingly undeterred by the steepness of the Hase river valley sides

General Klettern spreads his weaker forces across the ridge to contain the advancing VinAlbans and Davarians, feeding in the main body troops as they arrive on the Kloster Arens road. General Kratzen is now at the Kloster Arens and discovers a General Sumpf slightly the worse for sampling some excellent Kloster wine. Even so General Kratzen is pleased with Sumpf’s work the previous day.

As the afternoon beckons the grey day turns darker under heavy rain clouds. The Zarland forces have crossed the river Hase north of the Kloster bridge while the 3rd artillery deployed at the bridge and luckily for them. Opposite the 2nd Zarland Artillery, an elite unit, are under orders not to fire on the bridge which must be taken intact!

Today the elite artillery are off colour anyway as they fail to get the range on the advancing VinAlban 10th Infantry.

The fordable river is no barrier to the advancing troops. But it is the persistent light rain that is now affecting events.

The 14th Davarian Infantry are driven back across the old sawmill bridge

As the 14th Davarian Infantry seek the ridge line to the south of Kloster Arens they meet the 14th Zarland Cavalry and are driven back across the river Hase – with few casualties but suitably shaken.

Meanwhile north of Kloster Arens the VinAlbans turn the Zarland flank. Is this the moment the position becomes untenable?

Attrition is working through all the units in the battle. In the far distance the VinAlbans outnumber the Zarland right wing

At 1800 hrs the heavens open and a mighty deluge of rain slows movement and impacts firing. Although the Vinalbans are now making progress General Geflugel decides to withdraw across the river Hase as the weather shows every sign of getting even worse.

Photo by JACK REDGATE on Pexels.com

And so the battle ends with the Zarland Royal Army still holding Kloster Arens.

That evening General Geflugel held a review with his senior commanders including a frustrated General Modistin, the Davarian General. Everyone was informed that there would be no resumption of the attack as new orders from VinAlba required a withdrawl from Zarland.

An incredulous General Modistin stormed out of the tent into the torrential rain. He mounted his soaking wet horse and rode away cursing VinAlba and her useless Generals. At least he could say he had shed Davarian blood for Prince Otto in the so called battle of Kloster Arens.

……………as darkness gathers at the Rittergut, under leaden skies, the thoroughly soaked General Modistin grabs the last spotlight by staring hard to the east at Kloster Arens………………..

Categories
miniatures painting Vienna Treaty Wars wargaming

The Painting Pedestal: Radetsky Austrians?

My latest unit of kittel coated Austrian Infantry have arrived on the Pedestal.

In 1849 the “rock” with tails was replaced with the “waffenrock” – a belted full wasted tunic. The kittel – the soldiers everyday service jacket was similarly styled.

Of more note is that in 1850 the shako (tapering down to the base) was replaced with a smaller shako (tapering up to the crown).

So these soldiers are no good for Radestky’s marches of 1848/1849. However they will just about do for the 1859 war with Piedmont and France often known as the Second War of Italian Unification.

I could even go for a Napoleonic style shako with the new waffenrock for all of a few months. Decisions, decisions……

Having said that, this epoch is so confusing on uniforms I will just enjoy painting and gaming with whichever figures I like. And more to the point my gaming figures will often have their dress uniforms on. So no change there then!

The figures are from Waterloo 1815 – one of the few companies to offer 1/72 figures for these wars.

For my chosen rules I now have 3 x 4 base units including the mounted general. For some units I hope to add a non gaming flag bearer element.

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wargaming

ENG 1 (2) v ITA 1 (3): A wargamers hatrick

Jones: Are you sure they will close?

Smith: Are you sure they will stand?

Smith moved up his Douro Grenadiers

The Douro Grenadiers march bravely forward

Jones readied his Pultava Guards

later……….

So the rules are not clear on this and it can’t be a draw said Jones. Smith: Well the rules say both players agree a method to resolve equal results when the rules give no more guidance.

Jones: How about a dice off then – say best of five?

Now Smith was unhappy – even his mate had a blog called “don’t throw a one Smithy”*, and Smith had been throwing poorly all night.

Jones: ok ready?

Smith: yes

Jones threw a 6, Smith a 1 – Jones goes 1 up

Smith throws a 5, Jones a 4 – its 1-1

Jones threw a 2, Smith a 6 (wow!) – Smith now goes 2-1 up!

Smith throws 1, Jones a 3 – its now 2-2

Jones threw a 2 – just dont throw a 1 Smith!

Smith throws a……………..

1……

Jones lets a faint smile trace across his face – his dice throwing had been appalling recently.

Jones wins 3-2.

Bad luck old chap says Jones. Throwing three ones – now thats really just bad luck.

Jones: Your Douro Grenadiers need to retreat 6 inches – better luck next time.

Smith: Muttering about the problem of probabilities Smith measured out the 6 inch retreat for his defeated Douro Grenadiers.

With apologies to Lawford and Young.

*There is a blog “don’t throw a one” https://onelover-ray.blogspot.com/ and it is really good – so go pay a visit – the latest blog post is on a LIVE wargame and with, no doubt, some poor dice throwing – maybe even three 1’s!

If you throw three ones in a row, when wargaming, its best to hum Eric Idles – “always look on the bright side of life” as the opposition will then admire your tenacity.

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miniatures painting Vienna Treaty Wars wargaming

The Painting Pedestal: 1860 Neapolitan Chasseurs

These figures are my take on Cacciatori, in this case the 5th Chasseur Battalion who squared up to Garibaldi in Sicily.

Two Neil Thomas skirmisher units set up for euro19th century rules.

You can see an illustration in the excellent Osprey 512 Armies of the Italian Unification 1848-1870

In Neil Thomas Euro 19th century rules the firing line remains static for line infantry – only columns can move on the table. But these two skirmisher units can fire and move in this format and also break into their standard two base arrangement.

The figures are unmodified World War 1 Belgians from Hat Miniatures.

It is interesting that uniforms were largely unchanged from the 1850’s until the first months of 1914 and the Great War. What did change were the weapons, belts and ammunition packs

Some more on the Painting Pedestal shortly……

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miniatures painting wargaming

Still at the Painting Table

Well those pesky paintbrushes are still away – too much sunshine methinks – although its been a hit and miss affair so far this summer.

The good news is that some of the brushes had a stacation so some progress has been made with basing already painted figures.

There should be a painting pedestal along soon.

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wargaming

The painting table

The painting table rarely gets a look in on this blog. But when your paintbrushes have scarpered you can always rely on the paint table to be harbouring some unfinished treats

Here are some recent arrivals – no completion date though.

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wargaming

Painting pedestal blues

My pesky paintbrushes are still on their jollies, and they sent me a message saying they will be in isolation when they get back – the cheeky chappies!

Still I do have the – painting table – ta da!!

Categories
Mythical Realms wargaming

Fauxterre: Campaigning without Maps

Surely Campaigning without maps is an oxymoron? and when it comes to wargaming, maps are central to what defines wargame campaigns as opposed to say, endless rounds of competition encounter battles.

Well thats true. I have spent most of my wargaming life pursuing the mantra that the greater the detailed map the more satisfying the campaign.

Or so I thought.

I guess there have been numerous nudges away from that point of view when I think about it.

The thing is that I have applied the same abstraction that works for the field of battle to campaign maps. Out go measured marches and in comes the dreaded “outcome”. I suppose the test for some might be “does the end justify the means?” or why waste time getting a result that does not improve your hobby enjoyment.

Except “process” is what a lot of wargaming is and that means the process is the enjoyment in itself.

Moving pieces across a map at steady rates, checking the weather, accounting for ground conditions and working out where the enemy is are themselves a process to get to that almighty battle outcome – ok 6 units a side armed with One Hour Wargames – because you must go shopping or rearrange the cushions on the settee this afternoon for an evening watching the football/that latest box set/a comedy (delete /insert as appropriate).

It is not all about “outcomes ” because you could complete the abstraction and just toss a coin to find out who won that 5 year campaign you cannot seem to finish.

abstraction or the level of abstraction is often best considered in art – East Coast port image to be found in Hull Ferens Art Gallery.

It is about putting your effort into those parts of the process you most want to enjoy and sacrificing others through abstration to get you to those parts that matter.

And it is not that I don’t have any maps. I just use them in certain areas. I just don’t measure movement of forces “to scale” across them.

To my mind wargame rules came to the fore in the decades when scale paper maps became something to be purchased and valued – and used. People were taught eastings and northings and also how to fold a map. Remember some Generals fought their battles on the creases of the map in the pouring rain……..

Today you just flick the “app” tap a few virtual buttons and a high resolution image appears – is that my neighbours 3rd or 4th car – don’t remember it being that red – just how old is that image anyway…….sat navs beware……

For my Twins War in Fauxterre I have a narrative map.

High Res image of a low res campaign map!

Fauxterre is explained here:

https://wordpress.com/post/thewargamingerratic.home.blog/2061 .

https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/d/df/QSH_Tin_Wind_Up_Astro-Scout_Doppelg%C3%A4nger_%28Journey_to_the_Far_Side_of_the_Sun%29_Movie_Homage_2.jpg
D J Shin, CC BY-SA 3.0 https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0, via Wikimedia Commons

And I do have a means of moving forces in Fauxterre – it is an abstraction.

So here is the abstraction for my Twins War in Fauxterre.

looks familiar…………..

I guess at a certain point – by the late 1990’s? the DBA wargame rules offered the most popular version of this diagram.

well used and enjoyed
the last page

By version 3.0 campaigns had been quietly dropped from the title along with the diagram.

Except NO! – the diagram had been replaced by a set of words in the giant hardback tome that is now DBA post 2014: Maybe a case of more becoming less?

ok so you get colour and royal purple(maybe mauve?) but the simple diagram has been discarded in favour of words

I suspect this diagram had in the meantime launched tens of thousands of wargames campaigns – ok maybe thats a bit excessive!

Well that’s it for now, I will explore the mechanisms that allow me to abstract the mapping activity in a way that balances my available time, the process, the outcome and most of all the enjoyment of solo wargame campaigns.

I will finish with some words from Donald Featherstone which are surprising given they are to be found in his book War Game Campaigns.

quite a statement in a book devoted to campaigning wargames! the one about the real meat of the hobby NOT austrian armies rolling over……………

That is the challenge – making table top battles part of a narrative or simply having continuity requires effort. Effort which is not available for gaming the battles or painting the troops. Take your pick or choose your abstraction.

Categories
Vienna Treaty Wars wargame rules wargaming

On the Grid with Post Napoleonic

I have revisited some grid based wargames rules I used with some success last year in my shieldwall battles.

This time they are dealing with post Napoleonic Warfare.

Rules: Table Top Battles now branded for GRID Wargaming by Mike Smith and I was using a 50mm grid style table just slightly bigger than the one used in the rules.

You will notice that I like asymmetrical forces wargaming which is essential if you are to enjoy solo campaigns.

Narrative: Zarland is in crisis with the succession challenged and neighbouring countries all seizing opportunities!

Davaria, located south west of Zarland, decide it is time apply some pressure and march on Zarland.

General Jacapo Guarnieri led a strong force to the border. Meanwhile the Regent dispatched General Jenthe Knees with a hastily gathered force to hold the river Plima. General Knees at least had the good fortune to discover the likely crossing point of the Davarians.

He bivouacked his troops around the village of Menas.

He had with him

  • 4 units of Hussars
  • 6 units of Infantry mostly untried militia
  • 2 field guns

As the morning mist drifted off the river Plima General Knees viewed the arrival of the Davarians, who had been marching since just before dawn.

General Guarnieri had the following troops at his disposal. Many of his light troops were away foraging, sorting logistics and scouting. The irregulars were probably just sleeping under some trees!

  • 4 regular infantry units
  • 4 regular heavy cavalry units
  • 4 field guns

General Knees ordered his Zarland cavalry forward to test the Davarian left wing marching against the north Menas bridge. He posted the rest of his forces on the defensive.

General Guarnieri ordered his troops forward to take both bridges and force a crossing. The river here was narrow but with steep banks, difficult to cross. The Davarians planned to keep their feet dry.

The Zarlanders on the right have put together a scratch force with many new or militia units. They are trying to hold the river and prevent the Davarian forces securing a crossing to exploit.
The Zarland Hussars recklessly charge the enemy guns which are withdrawn. The success of the Zarland Hussars is shortlived as they encounter Davarian foot with some Davarian cavalry arriving on their flank.

Meanwhile the Zarland militia do well to repulse the Davarian Foot who try to rush the south Menas bridge.

Eventually the battle ends in stalemate at the south bridge as the Davarian Infantry can make no headway here. The north Menas bridge though is now exposed by the loss of the Zarland hussars who are driven off to the North West.

General Knees uses the cover of dusk to abandon his positions. The Davarian Commander General Guarnieri has secured his objective.

I used the standard rules plus elements of the solo rules section. The rules are a really useful halfway house for campaign battles where to set up a full game is not possible but dicing for a result is too blunt.

I have become a lot more amenable to grids – Peter Pig was my first enjoyable exposure (Rules for the common man) especially since I have simply never managed to like large hex wargames where I just feel its a blown up board game. Peter Pigs grids were almost invisible – excellent. Mike Smith’s grids are for me a happy compromise.

Categories
metal miniatures miniatures painting Vienna Treaty Wars wargaming

Hey its Summer!

Summer is here and some fine weather is in prospect, following on a week or so of warm and sunny days.

So the paint brush gang have packed their bags and headed for the seaside or wherever paintbrushes go in holiday.

figures abandoned in the basing zone………. WW1 Belgians (posing as Neapolitan Chasseurs 1859) with ACW Union Infantry (posing as Bologna Volunteers 1859) and Austrians in kettel and short shako (posing as themselves 1848 – 1860)

That means the Painting Pedestal stands bare.

the painting pedestal – a study in “still life”

Hopefully the Painting Pedestal will return later this year. Meanwhile the Painting Table is crowded with a queue of figures pleading to be painted or have their bases finished off……..

These Irregular Miniatures metal 20mm British Infantry boast the mid 19th century fancy of the wide topped shako.
These Warrior Miniatures metal 25mm Napoleonic Spanish are just started – in the distance some revolutionry chaps are awaiting their first colours – also from Warrior Miniatures.

Enjoy your Summer whatever the weather and whatever you do.