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Author Topic: Balkan Wars campaign battle #3: Kumanovo  (Read 535 times)

Offline ChrisBBB

  • Scientist
  • Posts: 299
Balkan Wars campaign battle #3: Kumanovo
« on: April 16, 2024, 06:16:04 PM »
The battle of Kumanovo was about the same size as Gettysburg: 90,000 Serbs vs 70,000 Turks. Historically, a Turkish pre-emptive attack on the first day was followed by reinforced Serbs counter-attacking on day two. See how our tabletop version went here:
https://bloodybigbattles.blogspot.com/2024/04/kumanovo-1912-calm-then-storm.html


Offline Basementboy

  • Mad Scientist
  • Posts: 570
  • Happy little chappy from the mythical ingerland
Re: Balkan Wars campaign battle #3: Kumanovo
« Reply #1 on: April 17, 2024, 08:17:18 AM »
Looks like great fun! Always nice to see fronts other than the western one in France being represented :D

Offline ChrisBBB

  • Scientist
  • Posts: 299
Re: Balkan Wars campaign battle #3: Kumanovo
« Reply #2 on: April 18, 2024, 09:01:07 AM »
Cheers, Basementboy! Yes, the Balkan Wars of 1912-1913 are really interesting to wargame. They saw big armies conducting big manoeuvres and fighting big battles. Understandably, they're overshadowed by the much vaster cataclysm that followed.

Offline Basementboy

  • Mad Scientist
  • Posts: 570
  • Happy little chappy from the mythical ingerland
Re: Balkan Wars campaign battle #3: Kumanovo
« Reply #3 on: April 20, 2024, 10:44:46 PM »
Ooohh, I might have to go down an internet rabbit hole now- this sounds fascinating! lol

Offline ChrisBBB

  • Scientist
  • Posts: 299
Re: Balkan Wars campaign battle #3: Kumanovo
« Reply #4 on: April 22, 2024, 05:01:58 PM »
'Tis a large rabbit hole with lots of tasty rabbits ... I can do no better than to reproduce Konstantinos's introduction:
https://bloodybigbattles.blogspot.com/2019/01/balkan-wars-book-published.html

===
For almost 600 years, from the fabled shores of the Bosphorus, the Ottoman Sultans ruled over a vast land in Europe, stretching from the Mediterranean to the Danube.  Sometimes enlightened, sometimes cruel, the rule of the Caliphs of Islam had steadily receded before the fury of national ideals and the rising might of European imperialism promoted by bayonet and capital. And yet it still survived, still stubbornly clinging to Balkan territories rich in history, industry and population. The “Sick Man of Europe” seemed to spite Greece, Bulgaria, Serbia and Montenegro; the states created by bloody struggle by those who once were termed the gavur rayahs of the Sultan. They saw with worry the growing appetite of aggressive great powers, all making claims to what they saw as their just inheritance. And then by coup and counter-coup, the fall of a Red Sultan, and the rise of a Committee, the rapaciousness of a young Great Power, and the entente of two old foes, the Balkan states saw danger and opportunity and struck. In the span of just a month of the greatest battles seen in Europe since 1871, the dream of Osman was shattered.

This scenario supplement for Bloody Big Battles! permits you to re-fight those great battles that saw the end of the Ottoman Empire in Europe and the formation of the basic modern borders in the Balkans. Nine scenarios cover some of the most important battles of the First Balkan War, covering the campaigns of Greece, Serbia and Bulgaria against the Ottoman Empire which would drive the Empire to the very gates of Istanbul/Constantinople/Tsarigrad.  Five scenarios then cover the Second Balkan War, the conflict between the successful allies which pitted Serbia, Montenegro and Greece against Bulgaria over the legacy of the Ottoman Empire.

Each scenario provides a distinct operational and tactical puzzle for war-gamers to resolve. From straightforward assaults against fortified positions like the First Battle of Chataldja, to complex double envelopments like the Battle of Lule Burgas, from the extensive broad fronts of the Battle of Bregalnitza, to the knife fight at close quarters of the Battle of Bizani. There are small scenarios easily played in one or two hours, like the Battle of Dioran (the actual First battle of Dioran), and more substantive scenarios like the Battle of Kumanovo, still playable in an evening.  There are battles fought on rolling hills and plains, like the Battle of Kirkkilise, and battles fought in some of the worst ground where people have ever thought of fighting each other in an organized manner, like the Battle of Kalimanchi.

You will see how these wars were similar to The Great War and how they differed from it. You will understand the crucial role of terrain as a military variable and grapple with key decisions of force to task allocation in an unforgiving strategic, operational and tactical environment. You will see the last glory days of the bayonet charge, and the opening bloody howl of modern artillery.  There is challenge to satisfy all types of war-gamers.

An included overview of the historical events and biographies of many of the commanders whose roles you reprise on the table-top will provide you with the background to give you an inkling of the vast stakes and human drama associated with these battles. An annotated bibliography provides you both with the sources used to build the scenarios and further reading to enrich your understanding and experience. A figure guide helps you find suitable ways to represent the armies in almost all scales of miniature war-gaming.

A struggle for a vast future awaits! Take command and see how history was forged!

 

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