General Situation: King Joseph continues to press the pursuit of Wellington towards Portugal. Spanish administrative difficulties during the retreat lead to a period of confusion in which Wellington is too far away from his Spanish allies to support them and they have been too tardy to follow his retreat. Seizing this opportunity, King Joseph has pushed forwards his leading Corps - the Third and the Fifth - to try and destroy the Spanish armies whilst they are separated from their British allies. Moncey and Mortier have managed to bring the Spanish Armies of Valencia and Andalusia to battle near the village of Moraleja...
Orders of Battle:
Spanish Forces:
Army of Valencia:
C-in-C: Cervellon (Plodding)
Adorno's Division: 6000 Infantry, 6 Guns
Freire's Division: 6000 Infantry, 6 Guns
La Serna's Division: 4000 Infantry, 18 Guns
Llamas' Division: 4000 Infantry, 1000 Cavalry, 18 Guns
La Pena's Division: 6000 Infantry, 6 Guns
Army of Andalusia:
C-in-C: Castanos (Competent)
Venegas' Division: 4000 Infantry, 6 Guns
Coupigny's Division: 6000 Infantry, 6 Guns
Espana's Division: 1000 Infantry, 1000 Cavalry, 18 Guns
Imperial Forces:
III Corps:
C-in-C: Moncey (Decisive)
Gobert's Division: 6000 Infantry, 6 Guns
Morlot's Division: 5000 Infantry, 6 Guns
Wathier's Brigade: 1000 Cavalry
Grouchy's Division: 2000 Cavalry, 6 Guns
Clauzel's Division: 4000 Infantry, 6 Guns
Musnier's Division: 5000 Infantry, 6 Guns
Barbou's Division: 6000 Infantry, 6 Guns
Corps Artillery: 24 Guns
V Corps:
C-in-C: Mortier (Competent)
Suchet's Division: 9000 Infantry, 6 Guns
Gazan's Division: 5000 Infantry, 6 Guns
De Laage's Brigade: 1000 Cavalry
Corps Artillery: 24 Guns
Set-Up & Dispositions:
From behind V Corps, looking at Adorno's Division with Freire's Division supporting |
Behind Gazan's Division on the left, then Grouchy's Division, then Morlot's Division and III Corps artillery, all facing the Army of Valencia |
The remainder of III Corps, facing the Army of Andalusia |
From behind the Army of Andalusia, looking at III Corps (upper left and centre) and V Corps (upper right) |
The battle begins with an exchange of artillery fire. Some of the French infantry (Gobert's Division) is driven back with loss |
Cervellon withdraws his leading division (Adorno's) from its advanced position; Grouchy's Cavalry and units from V Corps prepare to advance |
The blue order markers indicate that the French are preparing to attack along their right and centre |
Llamas' Division on the hill withdraws to avoid the withering Frecnch artillery bombardment |
The view of the Spanish left-wing defences from behind Gobert's infantry and Wathier's cavalry |
Gobert's Division is wavering after having been attacked by Venegas' brigades; just on the brink of victory however, the Spanish general withdraws his troops(!)... |
On the French left flank, V Corps and Grouchy's cavalry move up to their assault positions as Adorno (Spanish right) continues his withdrawal |
Same position, slightly different shot |
Moncey tries to counter-attack Castanos' troops, but the massed Spanish artillery is wreaking havoc on the French formations |
The French artillery in its turn has inflicted heavy losses on the Spaniards to its front |
Gazan destroys Freire's Division and then routs La Serna: La Pena advances to try and restore the situation |
Same position but from a slightly different angle; the success of both army's left flanks can be clearly seen |
Gazan defeats La Pena's division too. The Army of Valencia's infantry has simply lacked the skills and experience of V Corps' veterans |
Conversely, Moncey's conscripts are suffering heavily at the hands of Castanos' veterans; Barbou's troops have lost well over a third of their strength and are about to quit the field |
The position at the end of the battle: the Army of Valencia has collapsed, but Moncey's III Corps is (just) still in the fight. The Spanish end the battle and withdraw |
Game Notes:
The game took just over 2 hours of playing time. It was played ona 5' x 3' board,using Polemos Marechal de l'Empire rules and Baccus 6mm figures. The key features of the game were the dominance of veteran troops over line andagain, the importance of formation rolls. The most important turn in the game came quite early on, when Barbou defied the odds and passed his morale check (33% chance) and Venegas failed his (he had a 66% chance of passing). If Moncey had lost a division at this point and Castanos had kept his, it is very likely that Castanos attack would have defeated Moncey before Mortier beat Cervellon. In addition, the Spanish really felt the effects of Cervellon's "plodding" generalship rating: the Army of Valencia simply could not rally and manouevre whereas the French generals were always able to do both simultaneously.
All-in-all, another very interesting and exciting game, which really could have gone either way (III Corps Army morale was at 0.5 by the end of the game, a single die roll or a single extra unit lost would certainly have broken the Corps...)
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