Wednesday, March 4, 2026

No Duke of Montebello

Richard joined me in a one-on-one remote game to refight the 1800 Battle of Montebello.  While Richard is familiar with the Fields of Honor rules of engagement from earlier WAS/WPS battles, it has been a long time since we last played.  Shuffling through the archives shows that the rules were last in action back in October fighting over the fields at Quistello.  A few amendments needed to go into the latest iteration of the rules in order to account for the use of infantry squares.  The rules remained much the same with those exceptions.  After reading the Battle Briefing, Richard opted to take command of the attacking French Army under General Lannes.  The Austrian Army deployment was shared before the battle began.
Montebello battlefield
Montebello is quiet with Casteggio in background
Montebello was a pivotal vanguard clash in Napoleon's 1800 Italian campaign during the War of the Second Coalition, setting the stage for Marengo five days later.  On the evening of 8 June, Ott reached Voghera, ordering O'Reilly to hold Casteggio on the Alessandria-Piacenza highway.  Lannes planned to march west through Santa Giuletta toward Stradella expecting a weak foe.  Early 9 June, French patrols spotted Austrians east of Casteggio.  Watrin's 6th Light Infantry attacked immediately, igniting the battle despite initially being outnumbered 2:1.  Both sides misjudged enemy strength, leading to five hours of brutal fighting before Victor's reinforcements tipped the scales.  Montebello secured the defile, temporarily, forcing Melas to consolidate at Alessandria and fight at Marengo on the 14th.
Initial dispositions
The stage is set.   Let the battle begin!

Lannes holds the initiative automatically on Turn 1 and the lead elements of Watrin's Division arrive along the road heading west.  O'Reilly deploys his division in and around Rivalta with his jaegers taking up position in the village, itself.
O'Reilly at the ready!
Jaegers holding Rivalta
Watrin advances upon Rivalta.
Advancing upon a broad front, Watrin descends upon Rivalta and O'Reilly's position.  Marching through the tall rye (brown hexes), Watrin leads a supported attack against the jaegers in Rivalta.  To his right, French infantry sends volleys into the Austrian light infantry to the north of Rivalta.  Either unaware or unconcerned with the proximity of Austrian hussars, the Frenchmen do not form square.  Watrin's supported attack fails to dislodge the defenders and the French fall back through the rye fields.  Rivalta holds for now.  Seeing enemy infantry in line to their front, the Austrian hussars charge in.  The Austrian charge is repulsed as the Frenchmen form square at the very last minute.  Damn!  The hussars fall back upon supports.  Reinforcements are on the way to O'Reilly as Vogelsang crosses the River Coppa and pushes on toward Rivalta.   
Watrin goes in against Rivalta...
and is repulsed.
French push on south of Rivalta.
Vogelsang crosses the River Coppa.
After his initial setback at Rivalta, Watrin redoubles his efforts to take the village.  He forms up his eight battalions for a massive attack all along the Rivalta axis.  Watrin's attacks are ferocious.  To the south of the village, the French too easily scatter the grenz and overrun a battery.  O'Reilly's position is crumbling fast.  At Rivalta, the jaegers, once again, repulse the attack.  In the rye to the north, the Austrian light infantry unit is destroyed.  One battalion of the victorious French advances but is immediately attacked by enemy hussars.  This time, the French cannot form square before the cavalry hit.  The Frenchmen are cut down where they stand.  Still, the number of O'Reilly's losses is enough to break his division.    
Attack against Rivalta gets serious...
and O'Reilly looks isolated.
Seeing that Lannes has now reached the field with hussars and 28th Line, and that the road to Montebello has been cut by the enemy, O'Reilly decides that abandoning Rivalta is his only option.  What remains of his formation retires to the west. 
O'Reilly falls back from Rivalta.
With Watrin bringing his force through Rivalta, what remains of O'Reilly's comand continues falling back toward Casteggio.  Watrin does not let up the pressure.  His infantry continue pressing on into Voglesang's command, trying to turn the northern flank.  Those French attacks are initially repulsed.  By now, Lannes manages to bring his hussars around the hills to the south as his 28th Line moves west down the highway in support of Watrin.  Vogelsang garrisons Cascina il Giardina as his division begins shaking out into a defensive posture.  Ott, who is now moving with Vogelsang, receives reports that lead elements of Schellenberg's division has reached Montebello.
Watrin clears out Rivalta.
Vogelsang brings his troops up...
as Schellenberg reaches Montebello.
Seeing that Schellenberg has arrived and that his own reinforcements under Victor are only now reaching the battlefield, Lannes goes for broke.

Mounting repeated assaults against Cascina il Giardina on the heights, the 28th Line throws the defenders out of the stronghold after very heavy fighting.  Lannes, now at the head of two squadrons of hussars charges down from the heights and into a battalion of Austrians that never sensed the danger they were in.  Unable to form square in time, the conclusion was never in doubt.  Lannes slices through the enemy and continues his pursuit.  In the confusion of mopping up Austrian infantry and sabering a retiring Austrian battery, Lannes falls on the field, dead.  Actually, Lannes manages to die twice!  The first time, Richard rolled the die for Lannes and the result was KIA.  I stopped the action and suggested that the defender (me!) ought to roll the leader casualty die.  I rolled the die and Lannes was KIA again!  It was destiny, I suppose.       
Lannes swings into action!
Seemingly out of nowhere two squadrons of Austrian dragoons appear.  The Austrian horsemen crash into the remnants of Lannes' hussars and scatter them to the four winds.  Perhaps this danger has been neutralized?  No!  Swinging behind the cavalry melee to its front, the third body of French hussars smashes into a supported line of enemy infantry.  
Austrian dragoons charge in!
Surprised by this sudden turn of events, the Austrian infantry cannot form up into square before the hussars close.  In the initial clash, both suffer casualties but neither can gain an upper hand in the fighting.  As an aside, if the French lose the next round of combat, Lannes' formation will break.  If the Austrians are defeated, Vogelsang's formation will break.  If Vogelsang breaks, then the Austrian Army will be compelled to quit the field.  High stakes!   

With only a single combat point remaining for the hussars, the second round of combat unfolds.  Each causes a morale check upon the other.  The hussars pass their check.  The Austrians fail!  Losing the melee, the Austrians are hacked apart.  Vogelsang breaks!  Ott's army retires!   
The breaking of Vogelsang.
Wow!  That was an exciting battle that ended in high drama.  With only one point remaining on his hussars in the last melee, Richard not only needed to score a hit with a single die roll on the Austrians but needed to pass his morale check while seeing the enemy fail his.  That is what came to pass.  There was much rejoicing in the French camp.  Actually, there was rejoicing in the Austrian camp as well.  This was a helluva tense game and most enjoyable.  Did I mention that if Watrin had lost one more unit, he would have broken too?

As for the Butcher's Bill, losses tipped heavily in favor of the French as seen below.  With Lannes dead on the field, there will be no Duke of Montebello unless awarded posthumously.
Butcher's Bill
Congratulations, Richard, on a well-played game.  You managed to crack the Austrian army before their overwhelming numbers could be brought into play.  I failed to overturn the historical result and see an Austrian victory at Montebello.  The Austrians will be falling back to Alessandria.  I think the Austrians are capable of mustering a better defense.

Thank you for a great session!  Perhaps I deserve a rematch???

Oh, please visit Richard's account of the battle at Battle of Montebello AAR.  Game duration was a little under three hours.

36 comments:

  1. Pipped at the post in a tense tabletop struggle by the sounds of it.

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  2. That sounded like a fantastic game Jon, I will have a look at Richard's version too.

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    1. Keith, it was a very entertaining game. My Austrians came close but not close enough.

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  3. A great looking battle Jon, a campaign I need to learn some more about

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    1. Thank you, Matt! The early years offer some good battles and compelling strategic situations.

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  4. Excellent report. The game was wonderfully tense and dramatic, and your account reflects that. I would definitely play this game again. It is a real case of quality versus quantity and playing so that the quality is not exhausted before the decision has been achieved.

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    1. Thank you! This action had the markings of a real battle. Very entertaining, for sure. I have been thinking about our contest and lean toward the realization that I fell into a similar tap as did Ott in 1800. I may expand on these thoughts in a follow-on post. Great game, Richard!

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  5. Great game Jon, its a tough game for the French, but it looks like Richard worked out how to crack the Austrians.

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    1. Thanks, Ray! Tough for the French but there is a very intriguing quality vs quantity aspect of this battle. Richard managed to duplicate the historical result quite closely. Well, except for the loss of Lannes!

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  6. That was indeed nail biting, it is always very exciting when things go down to the last hit point! It looked fabulous too, I'm ever so slightly jealous of your large hex setup too but I just don't have the space.. Umm, 10mm figures?

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    1. Thanks, Martin! This one really did come down to the last die roll. Quite tense when that happens. As for my hex layout, I could go larger but for remote games, a 6' x 6' gridded area works best for camera coverage.

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  7. A cracking, close and hotly fought contest indeed. Excellent read and viewing.

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  8. Very good. I read Richard’s blog before and commented that I thought after reading the opening paragraphs that the French had a tough task …. But that came really close. Very satisfying when there is still so much game tension in the closing moment. It sounds like the rules were doing a good job.

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    1. Thanks, Norm. The battle presents a challenge to both on a quality vs quantity spectrum. We really did come down to a deciding die roll. The rules worked well in a new period. The common game engine has proven adaptable to many horse & musket periods and rarely rais any head scratching results.

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  9. Your second coalition Italian games are always challenging and exciting Jonathan. I wonder if it is the mix of terrain that provides enough space for manoeuvre and some nice objectives to be contested.

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    1. Having space to maneuver on the battlefield is an important consideration. Adding in meaningful objectives and reasonable army breakpoints help balance a seemingly unbalanced situation too.

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  10. Enjoyed this. Very close up to the end.

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  11. A cracking game there Jon and all to play for right to the end:)! Just a shame the Austrians lost by a whisker. Funny to read the Lannes died twice!

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    1. I agree with your assessment that seeing the Austrians lose was a shame. I gave Lannes a second chance to live. Fate said, “NO”!

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  12. That's a lovely and exciting battle. I love your style how you combine historical aspects and the actual game. The Austrian losses are very heavy and last year I was somehow in the period on a private event, when I looked in contemporary newspapers telling about Austrian bravery at the Rhine during the late 1790s.
    For small scales it's nice that the uniforms and flags are so different.

    I hope to see a refight.

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    1. Thanks, so much, André! I hope to see a refight too.

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  13. Lovely looking game and nice that it went diwn to the wire, Lannes lost to the Austrians but 9 years too soon!
    Best Iain

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    1. Yes, Lannes met his end here rather than later at Aspern-Essling.

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  14. Superb game and a very intense encounter

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  15. Great report, and the table looks lovely. Well played Richard!

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  16. What a sensational post Jonathan! I was on the edge of my seat all the way.
    Reading the title, I expected a French defeat and kept wondering what would go wrong (as it seemed to be going so well for them). The Richard and you killed Lannes. Betcha couldn't repeat such rolls at a casino, hey?! :)
    On to the re-match!
    Best wishes, James

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