Another week will make little difference as they are so close now ... only the metallic and repairs to be done.
Horse Artillery |
Foot Grenadiers |
Foot Artillerymen |
An exposition of the Hobby of TableTop gaming.
With commentary, notes and other items connected to this hobby.
Horse Artillery |
Foot Grenadiers |
Foot Artillerymen |
the field this time was a series of low and steep hills that the horsemen used to cover movements until ready to strike |
games moved fast |
Lone Russian Hussar escaped |
down to the last man ... |
"A principle requisite in painting up any army is self-discipline. Of course you want guard units. But stop and think for a moment. If you are just beginning, the quality of your figure painting is going to improve as you gain experience. So if you buy guards units first, in a fairly short while they will begin to look positively shabby in comparison with your newer line infantry units, which is not all the effect you want. By the same token, most people prefer painting cavalry to infantry figures. But cavalry only accounted for about a third, if that, of the total strength of any Napoleonic army. So my advice, in al seriousness, is to start with a line infantry battalion. Paint this and see how you go. Then you can get yourself a couple of squadrons of cavalry to go with it. Paint a second line battalion, add an artillery battery. Paint a third, and get some more cavalry. If you discipline yourself like this. and force yourself to paint at least one line battalion for every other unit you acquire, you will end up with a reasonably balanced army for which you should easily be able to find an opponent."
Garde Impériale by Funcken
~Bruce Quarrie, Napoleon's Campaigns in Miniature, p. 20
block colours |
guardsmen and horse artillery taking shape |
guard foot artillerymen taking shape |
Maréchal Prince Poniatowski |
Field of action at noon |
Bülow's center |
Coccaks and Corps of the Oder |
Center and part of 3rd Korps |
The Prussian line |
The French line |
in the center, one Prussian brigade runs out |
seeming in a fit of madness von Thumen raced out to meet the French at close range |
on the far left the Prussians drove forward to keep back French artillery |
the French artillery were the real threat that the Prussians had to overcome |
in the French center, counter-battery fire was the first method of Prussian attack |
the Poles were charged by Cossacks, when their guns were too far away and had to be moved |
the Cossacks paid the price, yet achieved the disruption of many batteries |
while on the far left the French allied German brigades were still marching |
only 2 pulses in turn 3, at the start of turn 4 the field appear thus |
Poniatowski was still seeking a weakness in the Prussian line |
Heavy French cavalry was on the far left |
French Left Wing |
while in the center Cossacks wreaked havoc! |
the Cossacks disrupted two batteries |
on the French Right, Prussians had chased off artillery and broken 1/2 of V Corps |
though it was now that I Corps arrived! |
an entire French Corps on the march, with light cavalry in the vanguard |
Cossack threat neutralized, the French could again move artillery closer to Prussian lines |
though in the very center one last Cossack force was not yet done ... |
Prussian artillery were to kill many French gunners |
while French guns replied at long range, killing many Prussian Landwher |
now re-enforced, the Prussians were do go over to the attack on the left, near the woods |
the French center was utterly shattered, until I Corps could arrive |
a wide open swath of destruction in no mans land, dominated by Czernichev's Cossacks in the early part of the battle |
Prussian cannon continued to deliver damage to French batteries |
I Corps now surges onto the field |
3rd Pulse turn 4, the field became a chaos as neither commander had any CD's remaining |
Vandamme's I Corps filled in the gaps in the French lines |
I Corps artillery moved to threaten the Prussian left |
French light cavalry, strike at the Prussians |
French left wing now in range of some targets |
turn 5 - reaching a fever pitch, now the Prussians had to destroy many French brigades |
massed French batteries on the French right |
Prussians grimly hold their hilltop |
French batteries on the left now in range of Prussians |
no mans land in turn 5 |
Russian and Prussian cavalry sacrifice to disrupt and chase away French batteries one last time |
on the left the French are pushing back the Prussians |
turn 5 pulse 2, the critical moment, could the French get in enough damage? |
at last in range the French batteries on the left deal out heavy blows |
Prussians on the hill are melting under the weight of fire |
French Heavy cavalry cuts a swath on the far French left |
critical decision time ... Bülow had just enough left for one more attack |
nothing remains of Russian cavalry on the Prussian left |
literally surrounded the Russian Hussars were cut down before they could withdraw |
the Prussians had no reserves left |
the command escort Cossacks are sent in to attack Poniatowski, who see them coming and adroitly retires |
Bülow now starts the retreat - his pioneer companies are to have an important task by nightfall ... |
more Cossack troubles, even less French cavalry to deal with them |
on the French left wing, the Heavy cavalry takes shelter behind light cavalry from some long range Prussian artillery, the Heavies have taken out three brigades of Prussians and are fully spent |
Vandamme holds the field |
Poniatwoski and the cavalry pursue, while the wounded French retire from the field |
after a major re-organization and amalgamation of units a 'rump' force of Prussians remains to retreat to .... |