*
Welcome, Guest. Please login or register.
June 05, 2024, 12:10:43 AM

Login with username, password and session length

Donate

We Appreciate Your Support

Members
Stats
  • Total Posts: 1696301
  • Total Topics: 118756
  • Online Today: 465
  • Online Ever: 2235
  • (October 29, 2023, 01:32:45 AM)
Users Online

Recent

Author Topic: Battlereport War of the Spanish Succesion  (Read 3340 times)

Offline ErikG

  • Bookworm
  • Posts: 97
Battlereport War of the Spanish Succesion
« on: April 24, 2016, 02:57:47 PM »
With these armies just completed we decided to put them strait onto the table. It was a battle in the war of the Spanish succession. France of Louis XIV backed by Bavarian allies fought the "Grand Alliance", in this case consisting of England and Netherlands who fought to limit the power of Louis XIV to prevent him to lay a claim on the Spanish European and colonial Territories.



France was led by Marshal Villars (Justin) supported by Joost and reinforced with Bavarian troops led by Abe.



The Grand Alliance was led by the English General John Churchill, First Duke of Marlborough (Sander) and Dutch troops under the leadership of Hendrik van Nassau-Oudekerk (Erik).




Marshal Villars entered the Flemish territories with a French/Bavarian army, shadowed by an allied army, for days a cat and mouse game took place between both armies while they were looking for "good ground". Eventually both armies approached each other near an abandoned Flemish fort, both armies could not allow the fort to be occupied by the other army. Early in the morning both armies faced each other, while dusk slowly passed into a cautious morning light both armies made themselves ready to deliver a decisive blow.



The first turn was for France and Bavaria, they tried to move their troops forward, Bavaria (Abe) went towards the abandoned fort where they wanted to place the lines at right angles, they stood facing the English troops (Sander) and if they would march past the fort, Bavaria could catch them in a crossfire. The French guard, cavalry and an infantry Division (Justin) were placed in the centre there they were to resist the Dutch troops (Erik and his son Alexander), on the left flank  were two more infantry divisions and one Cavalry Division, led by Joost, these had to secure the flank near the village.




The allies wanted to win in the centre, England had to compete with Bavaria and the Dutch troops had to take the French in the centre, on the right, near the village they placed two artillery batteries, the only purpose of these was to distract the infantry from Joost and keep them away from the centre, the Dutch Cavalry also remained there in reserve. As a "distraction" they also placed an infantry division on the flank, these were to move directly towards the centre. The Dutch troops in the centre understood little of all these complex plans and remained where they stood, the Dutch Cavalry also did little. The English moved slowly forward but without follow-up of the Dutch they could not attack in force.






Bavaria closed the trap and now they would wait for the English to march into that trap, the Bavarian guns thundered and the English lines were hit, the casualties were limited however. The French in the centre moved forward although it was not fast, the Guard also did not move, the remaining infantry moved slightly but not convincing. On the left flank the French troops moved forward in line and closed the flank.






The English moved further forward but when they looked to the right they saw an absolute chaos in the centre, Dutch divisions remained standing while some others moved forward in frustration but no one could see anything like a "smooth forward movement", the Dutch Cavalry also did not move at all.






In the centre the French tried to move further forward but their orders were also ill received and the French troops moved only very slowly forward, if they moved at all. Artillery fire did manage to cause the first English victims but the casualties were light.






The next turn again brought little movement for the Dutch troops whom, because of the early hour by which they had had to assemble, hadn't been able to enjoy a good breakfast and so they made a very slow start. The rear troops had passed the front troops but all the screaming by the Dutch generals could not encourage the troops to move forward. The same was true about the Dutch cavalry that also looked around pointlessly waiting for the coffee that they had drunk just before the battle to wake them up. Only the English moved forward again and were now in range of the Bavarian troops, a first salvo was discharged but Bavaria received few casualties.





Violent Bavarian musket fire answered the English shots and several Englishmen were killed, the French troops formed a "V" formation in the Centre, this brought them a line to hold the Dutch advance but it also secured their flank to a possible attack by the English cavalry. The French troops were ready for the Allied attack.






With the French finally in sight and the coffee that the Dutch troops had consumed finally started to wake them up, the Dutch enthusiasm grew. Finally structured lines moved forward and they formed a line in front of the French, the command "fire" sounded and the Dutch line opened a deadly fire, a great number of French soldiers fell to the ground but the French held. The English realized they were marched too far forward, Bavaria stood in a good, too good a position and slowly the English army moved backwards, watchful, waiting for the chance to to strike.





The French opened fire on the Dutch troops, smoke filled the battlefield while several Dutch were killed. French and Bavarian artillery opened fire on the English troops that were now out of musket range but no casualties were inflicted.





The Dutch marched further forward, they could now see the white of the French eyes, a new salvo was discharged and the French line was torn apart by many casualties, Dutch grenadiers threw grenades and these brought further death amongst the French, despite the carnage the French remained undaunted and refused to bulge.






Behind the French troops that the Dutch had fired upon, the French Guard formed, these fixed bayonets and rushed forward, the front French lines opened and the French guard stormed towards the front Dutch lines. The Dutch opened a closing fire before fixing bayonets and a bloody fight broke out, French grenadiers of the guard tried to break the Dutch line and the Dutch fought back with bayonet and rifle butt, they drove the French back, startled holes formed in the French unit, the Dutch made good use of it and the guards were exterminated.
A second French guard unit was in combat with Dutch grenadiers, here they fared better, the pressure was too great and the Dutch grenadiers withdrew but managed to find safety behind the supporting Dutch lines. It was a very limited success, admittedly a unit was driven back but a Guard unit was lost. On the flanks Bavaria kept the English under artillery fire while on the other flank units marched up and down.






The Dutch had recovered from the French attack and the blood in their troops whirled, wishing to attack the French troops. The officers calmed their troops and gave the order to once again open fire, the remaining French guard unit was driven back and the French again suffered many casualties but again they held.
 







Offline ErikG

  • Bookworm
  • Posts: 97
Re: Battlereport War of the Spanish Succesion
« Reply #1 on: April 24, 2016, 02:58:04 PM »
France realigned their troops an unleashed a salvo on the Dutch, again many were killed. French "Cuirassiers du Roi" charged a Dutch infantry unit and the Sabres slashed the Dutch troops that fought back hard. Blue uniforms coloured red while sabres inflicted terrible wounds, the attack was too powerful and the Dutch were destroyed, the French attacked an infantry unit that stood behind it, these were pushed back but they held.





The Dutch continued the devastating musket fire and the French continued to be weakened, for a French infantry unit the casualties were to severe, it broke and left the field. More French cavalry moved from the flank into the centre. The English also brought their cavalry forward, in front of them stood a French guard unit, if these could be destroyed, the guard would be broken and a hole might open in the centre for them to push trough. The French cavalry was still in combat with this second Dutch unit, the Dutch had fought back bravely but the pressure became too much to bare, this unit also broke, a complete Dutch Division left the field, there was a hole in the Centre but the French could not make use of it, the Dutch Cavalry had arrived and the French Cavalry regrouped by moving backwards, they had sustained multiple casualties and they needed time to recover.






The Dutch Cavalry advanced against the French Cavalry while the musket fire continued uninterrupted. English Cavalry charged the French guard, these received the charge and fought back hard, with success, and the English cavalry was driven back.





The afternoon sun was now high above the battlefield while the fight in all its ferociousness continued without a pause. Bavarian Cavalry attacked the first Dutch units in the Centre, these managed to stop the attack and the Bavarian cavalry unit was destroyed. The other Bavarian troops now also went forward, they wanted a confrontation with the English hoping to defeat the opposing English but for now it still remained undecided.





England now also moved forward towards the Bavarian troops, the front Dutch lines were again swapped by fresh lines while the officers restored order and peace in the hard-fought troops. Dutch Cavalry formed before the French but they could not yet reach them.





France set in another attack, the French Cavalry charged the Dutch cavalry and with great success, both Dutch units were destroyed. Bavaria was now within reach of the English and opened fire, several Englishmen went down but the English held.




A new Dutch cavalry charge broke two French Cavalry units and a deadly musket fire broke a French unit, English fire caused chaos within the Bavarian lines as many Bavarians lost their lives.





France counter attacked and put pressure on the Dutch Cavalry, these withheld the pressure and drove the French Cavalry back, and a French cavalry unit was broken. The remaining French troops opened fire on the Dutch but the number of French muskets had thinned considerably in the centre because of all the casualties they had sustained. A second unit of Bavarian Cavalry charged the tough Dutch troops and but these cavalrymen were also defeated and routed, the Dutch stood where they fought and refused to give up the ground they had fought for all day. On the French left flank two more infantry divisions moved towards the centre and the first troops of these divisions moved into the centre. The fight went on unabated.





The English charged the Bavarian troops that fought back relentlessly, two English units were broken but the other Englishmen held. The Dutch Cavalry fought hard on and the other Dutch troops opened fire on the French, the last French cavalry was routed and the French guards suffered terrible losses but they refused to yield.
 


Bavaria struck back hard but the English to would not yield, the French reformed and fought back in the centre, hoping that the reinforcements would arrive soon from the flank to strengthen the wavering lines. All day they had fought and both sides had taken heavy losses but both sides refused to yield the field to the other side and they kept fighting. Across the line the musket fire continued relentlessly as the dead began to pile up and the fighting zeal was replaced by intense fatigue.




Daylight slowly began to fade, the armies continued the fight, the English fired a deadly salvo that ripped through the French guard, this time the casualties took their toll, finally the guard broke.  The Bavarians held their ground, the English were unable to push them back. The Dutch launched a final assault, they wanted to take the centre and break through the French lines while daylight was still with them, a French infantry unit broke, most of the French troops that had been fighting in the centre since dawn had been cleared off, beaten or destroyed, however, it came too late, fresh French infantry marched from the flank into the centre, that lay strewn with the bodies of the fallen during a long days fight, the French infantry formed opposite the weary, hard fought Dutch troops.

The twilight persevered and the last light of the day slowly disappeared, the armies realized they could not advance further in darkness, both had fought hard all day and both had held, weary and disappointed the armies slowly moved away from each other as they moved back towards the nearby camps, they would take care of the many wounded and they needed to bury the dead. Both armies were heavily battered but intact, they would go back towards their own areas, reform itself, rearm and then they would go out again determined to find a decisive victory.

Offline Hunlion

  • Librarian
  • Posts: 171
Re: Battlereport War of the Spanish Succesion
« Reply #2 on: April 24, 2016, 04:12:57 PM »
Fantastic....well done :-) :)   Which rules did you use?

Hunlion

Offline Golgotha

  • Scatterbrained Genius
  • Posts: 2176
    • BMC Miniatures - All things wargame related.
Re: Battlereport War of the Spanish Succesion
« Reply #3 on: April 24, 2016, 04:22:38 PM »
Great to see so many pictures of a fantastic looking game. Do like the Vauban styled fortress and windmill terrain too.

Offline Calimero

  • Supporting Adventurer
  • Galactic Brain
  • *
  • Posts: 5759
Re: Battlereport War of the Spanish Succesion
« Reply #4 on: April 24, 2016, 07:37:16 PM »
Pretty cool stuff! 8)

I got a whole French army to paint. 7 Infantry units, 4 Cavalry units and, IIRC, 6 guns and crews. All Front Rank figures ;D
A CANADIAN local hobby store with a small selection of historical wargames miniatures (mainly from Warlords). They also have a great selection of paint and hobby accessories from Vallejo, Army painter, AK Interactive, Green Stuff World and more.; https://www.kingdomtitans.ca/us/

Offline ErikG

  • Bookworm
  • Posts: 97
Re: Battlereport War of the Spanish Succesion
« Reply #5 on: April 24, 2016, 09:29:24 PM »
We use Black Powder and made some "tweaks" to give it a more period specific feel.

All these figures are front rank as well, I love their figures! Sounds like you have a good bunch as well, any painted yet?

The fortress I bought at a convention two years ago and just had to put in on the table, the scenario did not really fit with it but I just had to put in on the table.....
« Last Edit: April 24, 2016, 09:33:52 PM by ErikG »

Offline Marine0846

  • Supporting Adventurer
  • Galactic Brain
  • *
  • Posts: 6617
Re: Battlereport War of the Spanish Succesion
« Reply #6 on: April 24, 2016, 10:56:19 PM »
What a fine looking game.
A cast of thousands.
Thanks for a great picture show.
Semper Fi, Mac

Offline von Lucky

  • Galactic Brain
  • Posts: 8796
  • Melbourne, Australia
    • Donner und Blitzen Wargaming
Re: Battlereport War of the Spanish Succesion
« Reply #7 on: April 24, 2016, 11:22:38 PM »
Too much colour before my ANZAC Day morning coffee!

Lovely, lovely stuff.
- Karsten

"Imagination is the only weapon in the war against reality."
- Lewis Carroll, Alice in Wonderland

Blog: Donner und Blitzen

Offline Sparrow

  • Mastermind
  • Posts: 1306
Re: Battlereport War of the Spanish Succesion
« Reply #8 on: April 25, 2016, 07:59:51 AM »
Brilliant.....
Put your trust in God and keep your powder dry!

Offline Emir of Askaristan

  • Mastermind
  • Posts: 1790
    • My Blog
Re: Battlereport War of the Spanish Succesion
« Reply #9 on: April 25, 2016, 09:38:04 AM »
An excellent report, plenty of eye candy too.

Nice figures, nice buildings and nice shell bursts with flying cannonballs - I loved them, where did you get them/how did you make them???


Offline Phil Robinson

  • Scatterbrained Genius
  • Posts: 3472
    • http://newsfromthefront-phil.blogspot.com/
Re: Battlereport War of the Spanish Succesion
« Reply #10 on: April 25, 2016, 09:56:15 AM »
Grand stuff.

Offline ErikG

  • Bookworm
  • Posts: 97
Re: Battlereport War of the Spanish Succesion
« Reply #11 on: April 25, 2016, 11:55:29 AM »
thanks for all the positive remarks.

Abe made those "shell bursts" (and he was very proud of them) I'll ask how he made them!

Offline The Grim Mariner

  • Librarian
  • Posts: 114
    • Grimsby Wargaming
Re: Battlereport War of the Spanish Succesion
« Reply #12 on: April 25, 2016, 03:12:42 PM »
That is a terrific looking game.  Well done - everything you need in a wargame.

Perhaps we should arrange a visit to the Grimsby club and play a large game with our figures?
In wargaming as in life - don't accept cheap imitations

Offline ErikG

  • Bookworm
  • Posts: 97
Re: Battlereport War of the Spanish Succesion
« Reply #13 on: May 04, 2016, 10:30:13 AM »
I suppose it depends on where that club is located, we are Dutch and it will be difficult to bring the whole gang abroad.

I did see some excellent games from your club..... who knows the next time we visit England

 

Related Topics

  Subject / Started by Replies Last post
64 Replies
21555 Views
Last post October 16, 2008, 04:32:41 PM
by Westfalia Chris
15 Replies
7699 Views
Last post October 03, 2014, 08:21:10 AM
by ErikG
3 Replies
1860 Views
Last post August 14, 2014, 05:31:42 PM
by ErikG
5 Replies
2700 Views
Last post September 26, 2014, 01:05:22 PM
by Kane
15 Replies
2034 Views
Last post December 31, 2017, 10:52:06 AM
by ErikG