Categories
wargaming

Part 1: Fauxterre 1930 encounter and some fuzzy logic

A quiet town in Fauxterre land awaiting dawn…..

Here is a small scale map used to show a part of greater Rugia – the red framed white arrow indicates some action being gamed.
This larger scale map is used to provide more local detail
The two maps together which represent real geographies and are patently different but for my purposes it matters not – they are near enough.

Welcome to my fuzzy logic mapping !

The small scale map is 1:500,000 and typically I am using these for corps/division actions

While the other map at 1:125,000 is for division/brigade/regiment actions

Of course the scale is extremely nominal under my fuzzy rules.

The white arrow shows the town in the main image.

Categories
Book Reviews Mid 19th Century Wargaming wargame rules wargaming

TFL’s Sharp Practice on World Book Day

Back in 2008 Richard Clarke of Too Fat Lardies published Sharp Practice. I had always considered this black powder ruleset very Napoleonic. Yet it is for black powder wars and these ran well into the 19th Century.

Take Two books – published in 1907 and 2008 but connected in just the right way

Enter George Macaulay Trevelyan (GMT) who a mere 100 years before Sharp Practice wrote a trilogy on Guiseppe Garibaldi hero of the Wars of Italian Unification (WotIU).

This little post is not about my current interest in WotIU. We must travel back to the 1830’s and sail to South America. Uruguay to be more accurate.

If I was not up to my armpits in Bersaglieri and Kittel dressed Austrians I might just be tempted south……………

The War for Rio Grande do Sol was fought out between Uruguay and Brazil. Later Uruguay fought Argentina along the rivers that fed the Rio de la Plata.

Garibaldi fled Piedmontese execution in 1836, having failed to cause rebellion in its navy, served in both these wars and became a local hero by 1848.

Garibaldi on his return to the Papal States and revolution

In the process he developed his expertise in warfare, leading bands of highly motivated and very mobile forces. This experience would serve him well on his return to Italy.

Warfare in and around Uruguay was fast, furious and often mounted

I am not sure how you might acquire the GMT trilogy – I got mine from Paul Meekins Military books. There are a few other more modern Garibaldi biographies.

In the introduction to Richard Clarkes Sharp Practice the author makes it clear the rules aim to relive the exploits of 19th century literary heroes. GMT hero worships Garibaldi not least because of his political leanings – a true revolutionary of the people. GMT adds a lot of praise and enrichment to the story shall we say.

Contemporary accounts and later biographies recount small naval actions with Garibaldi being shot on deck and his wife Anita Riberas also being shot as she fought with him. Lagoons, amphibious assaults, cattle rustling (the key cash crop), sieges, river gorges, forests, upland ridgeways, prairie, pampas, arroyas (wooded streams) and canadas (ground dips deep enough to hide your forces in!), not to mention lancer cavalry fighting musket armed soldiers.

If your desperate for figures maybe you could try the Carlists, while at least some of the regular enemies kitted out in napoleonic kit with british style shakoes.

In fact the Risorgimento continues to be fought over as a literary subject in itself. I have enjoyed Lucy Riall’s book which injects some 21st century objectivity into it all. Lucy has also authored a book about Garibaldi, that might be a good starting point for using Sharp Practice in a different way.

Those pesky Bersaglieri cannot be left alone…………..postings to follow

So my offering today is to the jaded “Richard Sharpe” player – cast way those green jackets and take on the slaughterhouse cloth of Monte Video* and march or should I say ride with Garibaldi across the uplands of the Rio Grande do Sol, grossly outnumbered yet most often victorious: And he lived to tell his tales.

*the famous italian red shirts apparently started life as a very cheap industrial clothing for Garibaldis Italian Legion in Monte Video.

Categories
Book Reviews Carolingians Military History

I like Maps

I like maps. They add to the richness of my historical reading. For my wargaming interests they have been essential.

I had cause to dig out this gem to show the interaction of the islamic world, carolingian and what was happening in england at that time.

There is something about the restricted colour palette used.

The style and publication is typical of its print date of 1961.

I picked this copy up in a charity bookshop and it is either an export that never made it to the USA or someone brought it back to the UK.

It is a book I often use despite having access to the colossal digital mapping online.

In a few dozen pages you can flick over one thousand years of history and still absorb what your seeing. A case of not too much information.

There you go – for some of us the feel of “parchment” is part of the reading process we cannot and do not want to surrender.

Thank you Penguin.