Tuesday 8 February 2022

Game 96 : Battle of Lutzen 6th Sept 1813

 

The Allied armies descend from the heights onto a dispersed French Corps, trying to defeat it piecemeal. It sets the scene for the last battle before the armistice in 1813.


As usual, I will leave the reader to find a map and follow the action. The Allies begin by transiting the heights into the plain below and fall upon the French. The French start with Ney's Corps with his Divisions deployed across the whole plain, effectively each Division is isolated. The above shows Russian columns, a whole Corps, launching themselves in the central villages.


Being caught cold and with no immediate reinforcements, the result takes some time but is predictable. The French are forced from the central villages.


On the Allied right, Russian Cuirassiers advance quickly trying to gain ground. There is a single French Light Cavalry Brigade in this area. This will be very one sided if contact is made!


As the battle progresses, the French right is heavily reinforced, including the Guard Cavalry, and the French launch their own assault on the Allied left.


The Russian infantry in the centre, having cleared the initial villages, tries to swing around to their left to engage the French right. The French centre has been hammered but has extricated itslef and is now reforming.

The French Guard Polish Lancers execute the first of four lethal charges. They overrun a battery and continue into the Russian infantry behind.


In the Centre, both sides are using squares to try and provide stability. Russian and Prussian Heavies are seen advancing from the top right. Out of shot are the French Guard Cavalry to the right. Not a place for infantry to be wandering around until the horses clear!!


The French Guard Cavalry is regrouping and Marmont's Corps is released to attack the Russian left which is defended in the first instance by a Grenadier Division.


As the battle draws to a close, the French Reserve Heavy Cavalry arrive, en masse, on their left flank. The Russian Cuirassiers, in one of the early pics, deploys to face this flank threat. A huge melee unsues which ends with a draw. 

The allies are now being pushed on both flanks and a recovered Ney is leading a counter-attack in the centre. We have played about 34 turns and we the call the battle. It is very much a historical outcome. The initial Allied gains are reversed by French numbers, but the French infantry is vulnerable in the open as they have a lot of lower quality troops. Throwing massed columns at villages, for them, is easier that trying to contend against combined arms in the open. So, Armistice time!!

French Formations

Losses %

Russian Formations

Losses%

Infantry

Cavalry

Artillery

Infantry

Cavalry

Artillery

Mortier

 

 

 

Baggovut

 

 

 

LeFebvre

-

15

0

Ziethen

-

26

17

Walther

-

0

8

Pirch

13

-

33

Demouster

5

-

0

Klux

13

6

44

Roguet

0

-

39

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Yorck

 

 

 

Ney

 

 

 

Hunerbein

17

-

0

Souham

81

-

25

Horn

19

33

0

Montmorand

27

-

22

Steinmetz

15

32

56

Girard

12

-

34

Berg

0

5

0

Ricard

11

-

0

Kasatschkosky

22

2

50

Marchand

9

-

0

 

 

 

 

Labossiere

-

44

-

Winzingerode

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Wurttemberg

8

-

0

Bertrand

 

 

 

Trubetskoy

-

19

25

Morand

0

-

9

Winzingerode

9

25

22

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Marmont

 

 

 

Konovitzin

 

 

 

Bonet

14

-

0

Tormassov

2

20

24

Frederichs

14

-

3

Gallitzin

0

7

35

Compans

6

-

10

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Army Artillery

-

-

8

MacDonald

-

0

0

 

 

 

 

Fressinet

5

-

19

 

 

 

 

Gerard

0

-

0

 

 

 

 

Charpentier

2

-

0

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Latour-Maubourg

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Bruyere

-

0

4

 

 

 

 

Chastel

-

27

-

 

 

 

 

Bourdesoulle

-

14

-

 

 

 

 

Doumerc

-

1

-

 

 

 

 

I have listed the casualty sheet where you can readily see some of the severe losses formations suffered. Souham suffered catastrophically as battalion after battalion got ridden down by Allied Cavalry.


Rogue's gallery is above. I don't normally do this, but Iain looks as if he has received a drill order from a Sergeant Major. Or maybe Anne was looking stern as she took the pic.


Iain is at it again, something must be happening stage right!!! Or he may be in need of liquid alcohol sustenance!!   Next battle is 1813, Katzbach, when we hope our Austrian contingent can travel.