Sunday, 17 August 2025

Burgos Campaign – Day One

 


 


26 August 1813 – North Spain – Day 1

British attack Pisuerga
1 British army – attack Pisuerga
2 British army – observe border
3 British army – observe border

French win battle of Pisuerga
10 French army – win battle of Pisuerga
11 French army – hold Santa Maria
12 French army – hold Cuellar
Battle of Pisuerga – End of Move 2

The campaign opens with a surprise attack by 1st British army on the border town of Pisuerga.

29th French corps is deployed between Pisuerga and the border
28th French and 30th Polish corps are in reserve either side of the town
They will not be able to move until the start of move 2
The British will enter the table at the start of move 1

On the left the Poles deploy their artillery and one infantry brigade on the hill.
The remainder of 30th corps are behind or to the left of the hi
3rd British corps have lost their artillery to the army reserve
They attack the hill, but quickly withdraw in face of the Polish artillery

The main British attack is in the centre
Wellington has taken command of the artillery from 2nd and 3rd corps
They advance to the left of the main road in support of 2nd corps
2nd corps have orders to attack the road junction in the centre of the table

Despite being outnumbered 29th French hold the road junction throughout the battle
Both sides suffer heavy casualties.

On the right 1st British corps send three infantry brigades to attack the village
28th French corps have one brigade in the village and two in reserve
The remainder of the corps is deployed to the right of the village
The British take and hold the village

At nightfall the French hold two of the three game objectives and win the battle.

Comments

Wellington took command of the artillery and one infantry brigade from 2nd and 3rd corp
He used this reserve to support his main attack on the road junction with 2nd corps
Despite this he failed to take and hold the road junction.

Without their artillery 3rd British corps were unable to take the hill on the left
The Poles reached the hill first, and moved their artillery onto the hill
Cavalry are unable to fight on hills, and without artillery the British infantry withdrew

On the right the majority of both 1st British and 28th French corps were inactive
Only one brigade can be inside the village, but two brigades can attack either side
The British were confident they could take and hold the village with infantry alone
They pinned the rest of the French with their cavalry and artillery, plus one infantry brigade
The French should have attacked, and thus forced the British to reduce their attack on the village
However they concentrated on holding the village, and lost it.

The main attack in the centre was interesting. The British won an initial advantage with their superiority in artillery. They routed half of the French corps holding the road junction.
However they could not redeploy quickly enough to engage the other half.
An extensive infantry melee would decide the outcome, and the French had better luck (dice)
During the melee I (as British player) rolled three 1s and one 2 out of four dice!

The French won, but they lost more casualties than the British. So in their next battle they will start with more casualties than the British. Battle casualty replacements bring all brigades up to strength less 10%. The French have casualties to six infantry and one cavalry brigade. The British have casualties to four infantry and one cavalry brigade. The French casualties are spread between two corps, the British confined to one corps. All of this will put 29th French corps at a disadvantage when they next meet up with 2nd British corps.

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