Monday, January 23, 2023

Back of Beyond Campaign - Winter 1917

War has come to the East with independent commanders seizing cities and claiming governance under them in the chaos. Once consolidating a base of operations, all struck out to try and keep their foes off balance, despite winter being upon them! 

The Bolsheviks were most Coordinated in their attacks, the 1st Babushka Army Corps of Commissar-General L. D. Runstein marched on Engelsk and  1st Guard Regiment, Ipatiev House, under  Kombrig Mahat Mikhan, marched on  Kroptkand.

The Red Horde under Altan Baatar Kahn advanced on the independent city of Bashkent and prepared to invest it. 

East Asia Cavalry Division under Hedwig Markus von Eggenberg, Margrave of Grosswardeinm stormed down from Gura, through Stlojia and onward to Bashkent where they found the city under siege by the Red Horde! 

The Illustrious Arm of the Nine Illuminated Terrestrial Immortals under Win-Cao Lo-Fat, The Most Illustrious Beacon of Celestial Light and Commander of the Arm of Earthly Might marches to  Ulan-goom then... ALSO to Bashkent!? Who would they find there!? 

Finally the 14th Allied Eastern Expeditionary Army under  Lieutenant General Sir Percy Arbuthnot-Worcester-Gruntfuttock-Smythe marched on Stlojia!  

Army Movements for Winter 1917

Here is how it all rolled out... 


Battle of Engelsk

Commissar-General L. D. Runstein was the first to make a move. He marched the 1st Babushka Army Corpsout of Baboushka, through Vlodkask and on to the Tsarist held city of Engelsk. There they found a small garrison making an half hearted effort to prepare the town to defend itself. 

Runstien was preparing to envelope the town when the Tsarist Gvardiya Belykh Koroley(Guard of the White King’s), under Baron Yevgeny Lytton, arrived on the scene at Engelsk - almost surprised to find the Bolsheviks already there!? Lines were drawn up and a battle quickly ensued! 

Three of the Bolshevik battalions were entrenched around the town and a fourth was entrenched at the bottom of a hill where the artillery was pounding the town.

After a brief, but devastating preliminary bombardment, the Tsarists arrayed themselves for battle. On the right, facing the town were the four infantry battalions of the Gvardiya Belykh Koroley. On the left flank were the artillery and cavalry. 

The artillery engaged in a duel for the first half of the battle - hoping to silence each other and then support the infantry battling for the town. Eventually it was the entrenched Bolshevik artillery that were able to silence the Tsartist gunners and were able to turn their guns toward the town.

Also on the left flank, the 32nd Cossack Cavalry Regiment attempted to flank the Bolsheviks and attack their guns from behind. But as they advanced, they were met by the Bolshevik cavalry and engaged in a protracted cavalry battle. 

In the end the Bolshevik Cavalry was driven off and the Cossaks galloped out of the way of the Bolshevik infantry dug in before the hill, before taking too many casualties. The were able to get around behind the guns and were preparing to bring fire upon them from there, but by that time, the battle had been decided elsewhere...  

Before the city the Bolshevik 1st Battalion turned about in their trenches and began hammering the advancing Tsarist infantry. The 2nd Bolshevik Battalion, to the west of town, left their trenches to support the 1st Battalion

The 3rd battalion, south of the town, also left their trenches and tried to storm the town while the defenders were distracted by the battle on the other side of town. They were ultimately they were able to take the town, but at some cost!  

Under the weight of fire from four Tsarist battalions, the Bolsheviks were taken apart in turn. First was the Bolshevik 1st Battalion. 

1st Battalion, 437th Infantry Regiment was able to occupy the trenches vacated by the Bolsheviks and bring fire on the town, but the combined fire of the remaining bolshevik battalions and the artillery that was able to shift it's focus to defending the infantry now holding the town, they sustained heavy casualties and were obliged to retire from the battle. 

Nest was the Bolshvik 2nd battalion. Stuck out in the open, they were also cut to pieces by the combined efforts of two of the Tsarist battalions. 

The three remaining Tsarist battalions were able to cause enough casualties among the 3rd Battalion in Englesk that they were also forced to give up their position and the city was relieved!  

Survivors of the Ist Babushka Army Corps retreated back to Vlodkask. A pursuit was initially considered, but with news of a SECOND Bolshevik force laying siege to Krotpkand, further to the west, it was decided it might be prudent to hold Englesk, regroup and prepare to relived the Siege of Kroptkand in the spring. 


Siege of Kroptkand

Kombrig Mahat Mikhan led the Ist Guard Regiment, Ipatiev House, out of Kubassa and marched on Kroptkand. The residents there were unwilling to give in to the Bolsheviks, so a siege dragged on through the rest of the winter. 

There were no assaults on the city and, as both sides has limited ammunition, there was little shelling. The Bolsheviks simply surrounded the city and hoped to starve them out. Most of the Bolshevik casualties came from influenza that swept through the ranks of the 3rd Infantry Battalion and 6th Artillery Regiment - luckily, it was mostly contained to the two units. 


Battle of Bashkent

The Red Horde had barely arrived at Bashket to invest the city when the East Asia Cavalry Division under Hedwig Markus von Eggenberg, Margrave of Grosswardeinm stormed down from Gura to attack from the East! 

The brash Hedwig Markus von Eggenberg, Margrave of Grosswardein, leading his unit of Mongolian Cavalry, approaches a bridge crossing the White River, east of Bashkent, far ahead of the rest of his column. 

Spying the Chinese Cavalry, led by Altan Baatar Kahn himself, von Eggenberg impetuously charged across the bridge to engage his foe, directly. 

The Khan, being more devious, did not pursue after the Mongoliand and Tsarists wheeled away to prepare for another charge, and instead caught the enemy cavalry in a brutal crossfire and shelled them with artillery. 

By insane luck, or just incredibly poor marksmanship on the part of the Chinese (or the fact that they were thrown off balance by the insane violence of the Margrave's attack!?), the Tsartist cavalry survived FAR longer than the reasonably should have... giving the rest of the column time to catch up and deploy for battle!? 

The 38th Hussars Cavalry followed their illustrious leaders example and galloped across the bridge into the mouths of the Chinese guns, to buy time for the infantry to deploy. 

They did not survive nearly as long as the first wave of cavalry, but they did buy precious time for the infantry to deploy. 

The Tsarists got the two infantry battalions of the 337th Infantry Regiment across the bridge, while the two battalions of the 369th Infantry Regiment depolyed on the flanks east of the river to face Chinese infantry units that were crossing at fords in an attempt to encircle the Tsarists. 

At this point the battle devolved into a protracted firefight. 

The overwhelming fire of the Chinese infantry (some of whom has remained in their trenches around the town), supported by artillery, was telling on the Tsarist infantry. the 2nd battalion, 337th Infantry Regiment, having crossed the bridge first, took the worst of it. Eventually the 1st battalion was also obliged to flee back across the bridge to the east. 

With the Russian infantry on the west bank of the river routed, the Chinese artillery shifted their fire onto the remaining battalions of the  369th Infantry Regiment on teh far side of the river. Already under fire from Chinese infantry and already suffering heavy casualties, there was no hope in recovering this battle and the remaining Russian infantry fled to the east with the rest of the Division. 

The survivors and stragglers of the East Asia Cavalry Division staggered back east towards Stlojia along the White River valley... but their ordeal was not yet over!? 


Battle of Stlojia

Returning to Stlojia, von Eggenberg found an army of Western Interventionists camped outside the city holding a strategic bridge across the White River! 

The 1st Battalions of both the 337th and 369th Infantry Regiments advanced towards the Bridge intending to pin down the forces within the camp, while the rest of the force tried to cross a ford further to the east and sneak into the city from the rear. 

The force crossing the ford took serious small arms and artillery fire as they cross the open ground between the river. 

Surviving elements of the 2nd Battalion, 337th Infantry Regiment made it into the city, but not nearly enough of them to hold it against assaults and artillery bombardment of the Canadians. 

2nd Battalion, 369th Infantry Regiment and the 38th Hussars Cavalry never even made it to the city. After having sustained heavy casualties, the survivors of both elements retreated to the east. 

The Remains of the Mongolian cavalry, savaged at the Battle of Bashkent, attempted to gallop around the city, hoping to flank the Westerners. They were met on the other side of the city by the 8th Battalion Canadian Mounted Rifles. the Mongolians tried charging the Mounted Rifles, hoping to drive them off as they dismounted. But the well drilled Riflemen drove of the Mongolians with withering fire. 

The Russian 1st Battalion, 369th Infantry Regiment took heavy fire from the entrenched 105th Canadian Fusiliers across the river and gave up the field dragging away their casualties. 

The 1st Battalion, 337th Infantry Regiment had a bit more success, deployed on the south side of the river they were able to pour heavy fire down on the Westerners that trie to assault the city, inflicting serious casualties on the 5th Battalion, Cape Breton Highlanders and forcing them to withdraw. It was not nearly enough, though. With all the other units in the division withdrawn from the field, the 3rd Battalion, Winnipeg Grenadiers storming the city, and 105th Canadian Fusiliers crossing the bridge to flank them, there was little else they could do but retreat to the east, hoping to meet up with other survivors of the Division. 

What remained of the Division made their way back to Gura, where they had marched from just a few months earlier, with less than half their original number... 


Elsewhere...

The Illustrious Arm of the Nine Illuminated Terrestrial Immortals under Win-Cao Lo-Fat, The Most Illustrious Beacon of Celestial Light and Commander of the Arm of Earthly Might marched out of Wei-Li planning to invest Bashkent. Just as they were coming out of the wintery pass that lead to Bashkent, the Illustrious Leader that the Red Horde was already besieging the city, after having beaten an army of Tsarists!? At this the Illustrious Beacon turned his army about and marched back through the pass to Ulaan-Goom. Many were dispirited by this hard march all for nothing and deserted the army along the way. 


Things not looking good for the Tsarist cause... 


I did take a LOT of photos and took DETAILED notes, thinking I might do some more detailed, turn-by-turn, blow-by-blow battle reports... I might get to those later this week... or not... That seems like a lot more work and I probably have better things to do! 


The State of Things at the end of Winter 1917

(DAGNABBIT! I just realized I turned the circle around Bashkent GREEN!? It should be grey, like Tashkabad, as it has not yet fallen to the Red Horde that is currently besieging it...) 


ORANGE

  • Commander of the Field Army: Lieutenant General Sir Percy Arbuthnot-Worcester-Gruntfuttock-Smythe
  • Faction: Western Interventionists
  • Army: 14th Allied Eastern Expeditionary Army
  • Base of Operations: Canadar 
  • Other Cities: Canuckand, Molsensk, Stlojia
  • Field Army:
  • 3rd Battalion, Winnipeg Grenadiers (13)
  • 5th Battalion, Cape Breton Highlanders  (10)
  • 2nd Battalion, Regina Rifles  (15)
  • 105th Canadian Fusiliers - Heavy Infantry Battalion (15)
  • 8th Battalion, Canadian Mounted Rifles - Cavalry (13)
  • 37th Field Artillery (15)


YELLOW

  • Commander of the Field Army: Hedwig Markus von Eggenberg, Margrave of Grosswardein
  • Faction: Tsarist
  • Army: East Asia Cavalry Division 
  • Base of Operations: Gura
  • Other Cities:  Driutsek 
  • Field Army:
  • 1st Battalion, 337th Infantry Regiment (Heavy) (10)
  • 2nd Battalion, 337th Infantry Regiment (8)
  • 1st Battalion, 369th Infantry Regiment (8)
  • 2nd Battalion, 369th Infantry Regiment (6)
  • Mongolian Cavalry (3)
  • 38th Hussars Cavalry (7)


GREEN

  • Commander of the Field Army: Altan Baatar Kahn
  • Faction: Warlord Chinese
  • Army: The Red Horde
  • Base of Operations: Lung-Hu
  • Other Cities: Wurumchi, Sui-Pei
  • Field Army:
  • Heavy Infantry Battalion (15)
  • Infantry Battalion (13)
  • Infantry Battalion (12)
  • Infantry Battalion (13)
  • Cavalry (9)
  • Artillery (15)


LIGHT BLUE

  • Commander of the Field Army: Win-Cao Lo-Fat, The Most Illustrious Beacon of Celestial Light and Commander of the Arm of Earthly Might
  • Faction: Warlord Chinese
  • Army: The Illustrious Arm of the Nine Illuminated Terrestrial Immortals 
  • Base of Operations: Wei-Li
  • Other Cities: Ching-ho, Ulaan-Goom,  
  • Field Army:
  • 1st Heavy Infantry Battalion (12)
  • 2nd Infantry Battalion (12)
  • 3rd Infantry Battalion (12)
  • 4th Infantry Battalion (12)
  • Cavalry Regiment (12)
  • Artillery Regiment (12)


DARK BLUE

  • Commander of the Field Army: Kombrig Mahat Mikhan
  • Faction: Bolshevik
  • Army: Ist Guard Regiment, Ipatiev House
  • Base of Operations: Kubassa
  • Other Cities: Pyrohy, Holopchi
  • Field Army:
  • 1st Infantry Battalion (Heavy )(15)
  • 2nd Infantry Battalion (15)
  • 3rd Infantry Battalion (11)
  • 4th Infantry Battalion (14)
  • 5th Cavalry REgiment (15)
  • 6th Artillery REgiment (12)


PURPLE

  • Commander of the Field Army: Baron Yevgeny Lytton
  • Faction: Tsarist
  • Army: Gvardiya Belykh Koroley (Guard of the White King’s)
  • Base of Operations: Bakunin
  • Other Cities: Kropotkand, Engelsk
  • Field Army:
  • 1st Battalion, 437th Infantry Regiment (Heavy) (13)
  • 2nd Battalion, 437th Infantry Regiment (14)
  • 1st Battalion, 231st Infantry Regiment (15)
  • 2nd Battalion, 231st Infantry Regimen (15)
  • 32nd Cossack Cavalry Regiment (13)
  • 245th Artillery Regiment(15)


RED (of course) 

  • Commander of the Field Army: Commissar-General Lev (Leon) Davidovitch Runstein
  • Faction: Bolshevik
  • Army: Первый Бабушка Армейский корпус (Ist Babushka Army Corps)
  • Base of Operations: Baboushka
  • Other Cities: Borschka, Vlodkask
  • Field Army:
  • 1st Transuralian Peoples Infantry Battalion (Heavy)  (8)
  • 2nd Transuralian Peoples Battalion (10)
  • 3rd Transuralian Peoples Battalion (10)
  • 4th Transuralian Peoples Battalion (15)
  • 1st Babushka Cavalry Regiment (8)
  • 1st Borschka Artillery Regiment (12)

7 comments:

  1. Replies
    1. It was pretty crazy...

      With the exception of the last one, there were a lot of moments in both games where it really felt like it could go either way. There was some just nutty dice rolling. A unit that started the turn at full strength just dissapearing because three different units fired on it and none could roll less than 5... Or a unit that got fired on for turns and turns and turns but no unit firing on it could roll higher than a 2 or 3!? details I made note of to put in longer game reports if I had time... alas< I just don't think I'm going to get to them this week!

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  2. A very exhilarating opening round for your campaign Tim, looks like a lot if fun so far....yay for the Tsarists being in the back foot, although I was surprised they got into a fight with the interventionist forces, not very strategic thinking on their part!

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Thanks!

      The Western Interventionists had invaded their territory, behind them, trying to cut off their line of supply. It wasn't the Tsarists picking that fight...

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