As the first day of March, 1739, dawned fine and clear, both sides of the conflict - Rebels and Imperialists, together with their respective allies, at once lurched into motion. For the Rebels, camped about Zerbst - the only town in their possession - the situation was fraught with danger. An Electoral Corps was established to the east at Seehausen on the Elbow River. Their numbers were established as not much larger than the Rechburg Allied contingent, but it could not be ignored. More worrying was the presence to the south of the Imperialists in much larger numbers. Baron Glockenspiel stood at Bernburg with the army to had been victorious the previous year, and the redoubtable Archduke Piccolo, further off at Ulrichsburg, would no doubt be joining his colleague very shortly.
The dilemma that faced Marshal Antoine Noailles, the Rebel army commander, was not easy to resolve. His numbers overall were fewer than the Imperialists', and the quality of his rebel troops was inferior into the bargain. The alliance of Rechburg regulars did not fully compensate for these disadvantages. But he did have one edge: the central position. He could strike at the enemy separated. Clearly it would be folly to leave one road unguarded whilst marching towards one enemy column; yet it were equally foolish to split his forces evenly. He had to mass against the one and leave a holding force to face the other.
Cavalry clash at Dichtwald on the Bernburg-Zerbst road. Imperialist Dragoons and Hussars in the foreground. |
Ideally, if he could strike at Glockenspiel before the Archduke joined him, he could then turn upon Plodt's corps, drive that back, and try conclusions finally against the Imperialists combined. But it was more than likely Glockenspiel would refuse action until Piccolo joined him. Reluctantly, Noailles shelved that scheme. That left an immediate strike at the Electoral corps. For this he would take his entire Rebel Army, and leave the small Rechburg contingent to delay the Imperialists for the few days required to smash Plodt's force and retrace his steps betimes. At the Council of War in the last days of February, Marshal Noailles had thrashed out his scheme, argued down the dissenters, and found a ready ally in Count Raunchfester.
The leading squadrons charge and countercharge. |
On his own initiative, Glockenspiel at once marched forth. So from the first day of March, the whole north of Ulrichstein was astir with marching armies.
Rechburg Horse get much the better of the first clash: 8 'hits' to 1 |
Eight 'hits' become 6 Imperialist casualties; Rechburg loses 1 Uhlan |
The first clash occurred upon the morning of the third, as the respective cavalry contingents made contact. Feeling he could afford the risks involved, Glockenspiel ordered his horse to drive in the enemy picquets, grand guards and squadrons right back onto the main body. It soon became clear that he had to deal with Rechburg regulars. The Imperialists had the numbers; the Rechburgers the weight. In charge and countercharge the lighter Imperialist horse could make no headway, and were heavily mauled in the attempt. Though one Rechburg squadron fled, and the Imperialists drew off in surprisingly good order, the effort had been a failure, at a cost of more than double Rechburg losses.
The Imperialist 2nd Squadrons counter-charge the now disordered Rechburg 1st Squadrons. They score 8 hits to 6, But this translates to 4 Rechburg casualties to 5 Imperialist. |
Imperialist troops fall back. One Uhlan squadron can beseen fleeing in the distance, but the rest of the Rechburg horse are standing fast. |
Sharp though the rebuff was, Glockenspiel bore it with his usual sangfroid. To gain something, he had risked little enough. During the evening of the following day, the Cuirassiers despatched by Piccolo joined Glockenspiel's corps, and the advance resumed the next morning. It was not long before the Rechburg commander revealed his hand. As the Imperialist columns approached the small sinuous stream, Schlangewasser, they could see beyond the blue coats of Gimmeitor-Oels regiment drawn up across the road.
Fourth March: the Imperialists find the Rechburgers astride the road... |
Meanwhile, from far to the east, came the faint rumblings of a cannonade. It seemed that Marshal Noailles had run into the Electoral corps as well...
To be continued...
"so it begins" my converns are so for the inperials... is the elector about to chnage sides. if so perhaps those cannonades are not the nice sound they seem.
ReplyDeleteanyway battle is at hand to arms, raise the banners and beat the drums. forwards men to the foe we march!
sorry got carried away. great story. I am still planning for Oronegro, I have ordered infantry but I still need foes, I will sort that out soon though I think.
These things take a while, but that's part of the fun. While you're waiting for the figures - and there it's best to start small in numbers to get the full benefit of horse, foot and guns - you can have fun designing your world and the people within it.
DeleteCheers,
Ion
thanks oh BTW take a look at the Oronegro blog, I have already got some early history done, you may like to take a look :-D
DeleteThe sound of distant cannon, music to my ears. Campaign season is well underway. Good stuff Archduke
ReplyDeleteMarching to the sound of the guns... Thanks, Chef.
DeleteCan Noailles divide and conquer? Will be interesting to see.
ReplyDeleteThe jury is still out. But the rebellion is doing well so far...
DeleteGeez, Ion, I don't know who to root for. I want the Archduke to be victorious, of course, but I am basically a rebel at heart...
ReplyDeleteI probably missed it (or forgot -- brain like a sieve); what tabletop rules are you using?
Thanks and regards,
John
Own rules. But as a result of just two actions so far this campaigning season (the second yet to be reported upon), I have some thinking to do. I'm especially concerned about how to handle cavalry actions. I know the sort of thing I want; it's the making it work properly is the trick.
DeleteOf course, the Archduke is meant to be something of an Imperialist hero, but I have to admit a sneaking desire to see the rebellion overcome the odds...
Cheers,
Ion
Good to see it its of to a flying start Ion, wonder why I am rooting for theose rebels and their allies.
ReplyDeleteA damned good read
Barry
Of course, without the Rechburg allies, the rebellion would have died already. I think you will enjoy the account of the Battle of Schlangewasser...
DeleteWhen I write it up...
Thanks for an enjoyable wargames evening, Barry. Paul and I both are having fun with this combat at Hister. It makes a change to be an anti-Imperialist, at that!
Cheers
Ion
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