NWOL Fall 2005 Campaign
Campaign History
The fall 2005 campaign began when war broke out between France and the
alliance of Britain and Spain. Before the outbreak of hostilities,
Sardinia allied with the French, and Russia agreed to send a contingent
of troops to defend Spain. Holland signed a defensive pact with Britain
but did not formally join the British/Spanish/Russian alliance. France,
however, anticipated that the defensive pact would be followed by a
formal alliance. France chose to strike Holland before the alliance
could be signed, and initiated the campaign by invading Holland, and
simultaneously opening a campaign on the Spanish border as well. Thus,
the war was fought on a northern front, France vs. Britain (including
Britain's Hannoverian possessions) and Holland, and on a southern
front, France and Sardinia vs. Spain and Russia. [ Details ]
At the start of operations, the troops of the various nations were
deployed as follows. In the north, France had one corps deployed around
Amiens and another, slightly smaller, deployed around Reims. The
British had a mixed British/German corps deployed around Dortmund and
another, all British, around London. In the south, the French had one
corps in the Perpignan area and a smaller force deployed between Pau
and Bayonne, and the Sardinian army was mostly at Cagliari with a small
force around Nice. At sea, the entire French fleet was at Toulon, 38 of
the line, and a Sardinian fleet of 18 ships was at Nice. 6 more
Sardinian ships were at Cagliari. The British fleet was divided, with
23 ships in the English Channel and 20 at Gibraltar. The Dutch fleet of
16 was at Amsterdam. In the south, the Spanish fleet had 21 in the
Western Mediterranean; the Russians had 10 ships at Cartagena. [ Details ]
In the north, the French advanced rapidly into Holland, while the Dutch
and British/German troops collected. The British and Dutch formally
allied as soon as the French crossed the Dutch border, and
British/German troops moved into Holland to assist the Dutch defense.
But the French had moved faster. At the end of turn 2, the French had
collected an army of 15 brigades at Brussels and a corps of 8
more at Namur. The Dutch had one division of regulars and one of
militia in each place, while the British and Germans were still a
turn's march away. On turn 3 the French army attacked and took both
cities, inflicting over 10,000 casualties (many of them among the Dutch
militia which were largely destroyed in the fighting) while taking only
3,000 themselves. The defeated Dutch began to reconcentrate at Antwerp.
Meantime, the British army moved into Namur with 11 brigades. The
French withdrew west, with German cavalry in pursuit, while the Dutch
reoccupied Namur. [ Details ]
Meanwhile, in the south, two parallel movements were underway. Along
the Mediterranean coast, the French army had moved south to attack the
Russians near Barcelona, while along the Atlantic coast, the Spanish
army was moving north to secure the passes of the Pyrenees south of
Bayonne and Pau. On turn 3, the French
fell on a Russian force north of Barcelona, which they outnumbered more
than 2 to 1, and shattered it. The remaining Russian troops fell back
on Tarragona, and on the following turn the French captured Barcelona.
To the west, the Spanish army was advancing in two columns. Finding
only weak opposition, they pushed forward through the mountains and
entered French territory. The
defending French forces abandoned Bayonne and concentrated against the
Spanish column heading towards Pau. On turn 4 the Spanish entered
Bayonne, but the French inflicted a sharp defeat on the column
approaching Pau. Outnumbered, however, the French were forced to
retreat from Pau at the end of the turn. On turn 5, the Spanish
concentrated around Pau, while the French fell back towards Toulouse.
The Russians raised new troops at Odessa and Sevastopol, and prepared
convoys to bring them to the scene of battle. [
Details ]
At sea, the fleets in the Mediterranean concentrated. The Sardinians
sent 12 ships to join the French at Toulon. The Spanish, Russians, and
British sailed to the Western Mediterranean, concentrating 31 ships
there, while sending squadrons ahead to Cagliari and the Central
Mediterranean to scout for the enemy fleet. The Spanish found Cagliari
empty; their Central Mediterrean squadron failed to detect 6 Sardinian
ships and an unloaded transport group headed to Nice. The British,
Russians, and Spanish fleet proceeded to Cagliari, concentrating 43
ships there, hoping to prevent the Sardinian fleet from re-entering the
port. Meantime, the French and Sardinian fleet from Toulon was sailing
into the Western Mediterranean, looking for the British and Spanish in
those waters. Not finding them, and hearing that a Spanish squadron had
been sighted at Cagliari on turn 1, the French and Sardinians
themselves moved to that port on turn 3, where the British, Russian,
and Spanish fleets awaited them. Several British ships had departed
Cagliari on turn 3, but had been replaced by an arriving Spanish
squadron, leaving 41 ships to face the 50 French and Sardinian ships.
On turn 4, the fleets engaged, the French fighting from windward, and
the French and Sardinians won a crushing victory, sinking 16 ships and
capturing 16 prizes in exchange for the loss of 6 of their own ships.
The Russian navy was entirely destroyed; the British and Spanish
survivors sailed west for the safety of the Spanish coast. The
victorious fleet put into Cagliari for repairs, bringing the naval war
to a pause for several turns. The British and Dutch fleets in the North
Sea and the English Channel immediately sent additional ships to the
Mediterranean. [ Details ]
On the northern front, the French realized that their position was in
danger from the British/German army approaching from their right rear.
They abandoned Brussels, their force there marching south to join up
with the force retreating from Namur. By the end of turn 4 the French
army was concentrated in a single body around E2-T8. Meantime, the
British and Germans had moved north from Namur, aiming to join forces
with Dutch troops concentrating at Antwerp. Accordingly, for a turn,
the two main bodies were out of contact with one another, although the
cavalry of both sides kept track of the opposing armies. On turn 5, the
French, now concentrated, returned to Brussels, leaving two divisions
to the southwest of Brussels to guard against Dutch troops from the
Ghent area. Meantime, the Dutch and British armies concentrated due
east of Brussels, and a British division from England landed at
Antwerp. On turn 6, the French posted their troops around Brussels. The
British and Dutch approached and drove the French back, especially
south of the city. At the end of turn 6, the armies were poised for
battle, 23 French brigades against 23 Allied. The French, with a
substantial advantage in cavalry, were able to control the opening of
the battle, and attacked. Their left assaulted the British/Dutch right
and drove it back with heavy casualties, while the British pushed
against the French right. Although the battle was going well for the
French, the French commanders decided not to risk their army in
continued combat, and withdrew to the west and south. As the withdrawal
continued, the French decided not to return to the
area of Lille. Instead, the French army observed that there were no
British/Dutch troops at Namur, and marched due east towards that city.
Although some units were intercepted by Dutch and German cavalry south
of Brussels during this march, most of the British army remained in
Brussels or north of it on turn 8, and most of the French units reached
the vicinity of Namur. On turn 9, the French took Namur and entered
Liege, also undefended, while the British marched south from Brussels
towards the French units that had been halted there on turn 9, and also
southwest towards Lille. At the end of this turn the armies were again
separated, the French to the east and the British/Dutch to the west,
about 45 miles apart. [ Details ]
The British/Dutch army had to choose whether to pursue the French to
the east, or move south across the largely undefended French border.
The French army, in turn, had to decide whether to turn back southwest
towards Reims or continue marching east. The French, not wishing to
risk another major encounter, chose to move towards Nancy by way of
Luxemburg. The British, anticipating that the French would not stand in
eastern Holland, sent one force towards Liege to recapture that city,
and the rest of their army into France, targeting Reims and Lille, and
supporting this move with a landing of British troops from London at
Boulogne. Both Reims and Lille fell on turn 11, placing a large British
and Dutch force between the French army and Paris. The French army
continued to move on Nancy, with a British/Dutch force of approximately
equal size in pursuit. Boulogne fell to the Allies on turn 12, Rouen on
turn 13, and Paris itself fell to a raiding German dragoon brigade on
turn 14, with only a single militia brigade defending the city. Amiens
fell the same turn. The British/Dutch entered Nancy on turn 14 and some
fighting occurred, 11 British/German/Dutch brigades against 10 French
regular brigades and several divisions of militia, before the campaign
ended. [ Details ]
In the south, after the fall of Barcelona, the French left a division
to garrison the city and, instead of pursuing the Russians south, moved
west towards Pau on the south slope of the Pyrennees. They sent cavalry
into the passes of the mountains, hoping to cut the Spanish off from
their supply lines; they closed several, but the Spanish kept the pass
south of Pau open. On turn 6, the French recrossed the Pyrenees and
joined with the survivors of the Pau fight. The combined force moved
towards Pau on turn 7; but on the same turn the Spanish withdrew back
into the mountains, abandoning Bayonne, which the French recaptured on
turn 7, and Pau, retaken by the advancing French on turn 8. Meantime,
the Russians regrouped at Tarragona, and were reinforced by a
Spanish infantry division and some heavy cavalry raised in Tarragona.
This force moved back into
Barcelona on turn 6. The French defenders, who were heavily outnumbered
by the attacking forces, made a spirited counterattack on the leading
Spanish and Russian units on turn 7 which pushed back the Russians and
Spanish and kept Barcelona in French hands. Despite this, the
outnumbered French withdrew the following turn. At this point the
Sardinian army entered the campaign; the victory of the French and
Sardinian navy enabled the Sardinians to make an amphibious landing on
the Spanish coast three squares north of Barcelona. The arrival of
seven Sardinian brigades shifted the balance of forces back in favor of
the French and Sardinian army. [ Details ]
On turn 9 the armies concentrated, the
Spanish and Russians in Barcelona and the French and Sardinians two
squares north. The French and Sardinians advanced cautiously towards
Barcelona, and on turn 11 surrounded the city and attacked some
outlying Russian positions. On turn 12 they assaulted the city itself,
capturing it and destroying much of the Spanish army in the battle.
With little or no opposition left before them, the Sardinians marched
to Tarragona on turn 13 and took it without opposition on turn 14, the
defending Spanish militia disbanding before action. On the Atlantic
coast, both sides regrouped for a time after turn 8. On
turn 9, the French pushed south from Pau, catching and destroying two
Spanish brigades in the mountains; a column moved south from Bayonne on
turn 10 as well. The French were content to advance to the border and
did not attempt to cross into Spain; the Spanish made one attempt to
move north towards Pau, and also send a column towards Bayonne, but the
French were able to contain the advance without serious fighting, and
the campaign ended with the Spanish army just north of the border. [ Details ]
The British and Dutch fleets sailing from the north reached Gibraltar
on turn
7 with 41 ships. The French/Sardinian fleet, now with a strength
of 73 ships, was still in Cagliari completing repairs. The British
attempted to join with
the Spanish survivors of the Cagliari battle, and also send some ships
north along the Spanish coast, trying to prevent amphibious landings
there. On turn 9, the main British/Dutch fleet, reduced by detachments
to 29 ships, sailed back to Cagliari and found the French/Sardinian
fleet still there. The French/Sardinian fleet came out to give battle,
and the British/Dutch fleet accepted, but fought a more cautious battle
than the previous one. The French/Sardinians won a second victory,
sinking two enemy ships and taking three prizes; most of the
British/Dutch fleet escaped from what was clearly an uneven battle. The
fleeing ships scattered; most ended up in the Central Mediterranean,
while some returned to the southern Spanish coast. The pursuing French
and Sardinians caught four British ships the next turn, taking two more
prizes. The French/Sardinian fleet, seeking to find more remnants of
the enemy, headed towards Barcelona. There they found no warships, but
did encounter an unescorted Russian transport group bringing
reinforcements to the Russian army, then engaged around the city of
Barcelona. They trapped this transport group and sank it, along with
the three Russian infantry brigades it carried. The French and
Sardinians spent the last two turns cruising the Gulf of Lyon, leaving
the Sardinian coast undefended. On turn 13, a second Russian transport
group put a large Russian infantry division ashore near Cagliari, and
on turn 14 this force captured Cagliari without opposition. The British
and
Dutch fleets came up to Cagliari on turn 13 to support the landing, and
six British ships made an ill-advised attempt to destroy the coastal
guns on T14 before the Russian infantry arrived, resulting in the loss
of 4 ships and no damage to the defenses, which were then taken from
the rear by the Russian infantry. [ Details ]