Tuesday, 22 April 2025

Swiss!

 Helion Wargames and other stuff editor Charles Singleton was in the hood so we decided to have a game with his newly painted Italian Wars army, and a beautiful thing it is too. I let Charles choose a scenario from the new 'Wargaming the Italian Wars' book and he chose Marignano 1515AD, mainly I think to get his Swiss on the table. 

The battle was a two day affair, on the first there was ferocious fighting as the Swiss tried to breach the French defences and silence their artillery, it was only the onset of darkness which called a halt. The next day the Swiss again assaulted the French line to no avail as the artillery and massed arquebusier fire scythed their ranks, charges by the French cavalry also pinned them and with the arrival of the Venetians even the vaunted Swiss had had enough.

I set the game up as per the new book using Furioso rules, immediately I had my doubts just how effective the cavalry would be, the Gendarmes like the real battle could only throw themselves at the pike blocks to wear them down, they probably could not actually stop them. This meant that for most of the action I simply repositioned the heavy cavalry to attack any pike block which made it across the bulwark, the light cavalry to my front I hoped would annoy the Swiss and cause some casualties and weaken them before they came to push of pike. In the end they too were pulled off to the flanks to give my guns a clear line of fire.

A view from the French position.

The French camp.

The French.

As the Swiss advanced they too had a problem getting the best use out of their artillery and the Milanese cavalry as the battlefield funneled troops between the road and the dry ditch. My artillery at first was desultory to say the least and even with the addition of my missile troops the Swiss easily shrugged off the odd casualty. I decided to let my men at the breastworks take the brunt of the enemy attack then hopefully when they were disordered and struggling send in my Landsknechts to finish them off. A heavy fusilade forced back the first block that tried to force the works but it came back again and managed to maintain its order as it cut down some crossbowmen along with a smaller French pike block. I had moved two Landsknecht blocks up for just this occurance as a large hole appeared in my line, one failed to contact while the other charged in but was pushed back by the victorious Swiss. 

The Swiss left.

Milanese and artillery.

The Swiss advance.

 A second and then a third enemy kiel smashed into my entrenchments, I lost an artillery piece but the defenders held helped by the fact that both of the new combatants had become disordered by the terrain. The main Swiss block on my right was now beginning to suffer as casualties mounted and a second Landsknecht block hit them. I rained down curses on the Germans as even with a wounded Swiss kiel to their front they were pushed back, my cavalry, now set up to hit the enemy in the flank looked on waiting their moment. The Landsknechts took the hint and reversed their backward slide and dealt out enough hurt to disorder their opponents.

Nearly there.

The French in disarry.

A fight between mortal enemies.  

 With all three Swiss blocks held and disordered and with fresh mercenaries ready to enter the fray supported by Gendarmes on the wings we called a halt. Despite the fact that my cavalry had not made one charge due to the outstanding performance of my infantry they would no doubt have mopped up any Swiss survivors who cleared the breastworks. The battle is a huge ask for the Swiss commander but once we got to grips it kept us amused for several hours of fighting back and forth along the defences. I would be tempted to fight it again despite the long odds.

The rest of the Swiss hit the breastwork.

The end.

Charles kindly left me with a copy of the Helion book and if I say so myself it is an excellent wargame guide for the period which covers every aspect from the history to flags and scenarios.

I was in Darlington over Easter for my granddaughters sixteenth birthday and on the Monday we had a walk in a local park and I came upon a Russian cannon from the Crimean War, two had been requested but a political battle ensued between the Quakers, who did not want it, and the locals who did. One was eventually awarded and after a long history ended up in its present position in South Park.



Another unit has now joined the army of Maximinus Thrax, Lanciarii skirmishers. I have decided with almost half the army complete I now need to work on my officers and Thrax himself so commanders are up next. 


14 comments:

  1. A splendid game from what is not doubt a splendid publication, but outside my usual price point for a wargames book. Looking forward to seeing Thrax & Co.

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    1. It was indeed David, I shall try and make Thrax look the part, he was an imposing man.

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  2. A fine, fun and colourful game there George. Splendid addition to the Roman ranks too.

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    1. Thanks Phil, a great way to spend an afternoon.

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  3. Excellent battle report, Geoge, and you came away with a victory. The book is very tempting but last I looked, not on Amazon yet.

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    1. Thanks Jonathan, hard battle for a Swiss commander. It’s a nice book.

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  4. Cracking looking game, not many more colourful games than the Italian Wars, lovely collection of miniatures on the table, really top notch. Great additions to your project as well, very nice skirmishers.

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    1. Thanks Donnie, it was an exciting fight albeit a bit one sided.

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  5. What a fabulous looking game! I picked up that book at Salute, but stupidly put it down again thinking, I'll come back for that later, which of course I never did!
    Who've thought you'd find Russian guns in Darlington?!?

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    1. Saved yourself from going down a rabbit hole Ray. I thought the carriage was interesting, all metal, probably a fortress gun.

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  6. A cracking looking game George…
    I am looking forward to seeing what you do for Thrax…

    All the best. Aly

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    1. Thanks Aly. I have several commander figures so looking forward to getting started.

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  7. Wonderful looking battle George ….all those pike blocks are quite spectacular. An interesting historical battle but as you say a very tough one to get any sense of balance ?

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    1. Thanks Matt. I think the Swiss would have been worn down but it would take time. Their reputation took a bit of a knock after this.

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