Friday, 7 November 2014

Campaign Events: 129-124 BC

All is quite for a few years, but then:

Autumn 127: The Parthians arrive back in Bactria.  This time it looks as though they are going to stay.  The Indians across the eastern border of Bactria decide not to provoke any aggressive moves from the men on horses, and so prudently move southwards back towards their own supply bases.  They will want to confront the Parthians later, on their own terms.
Summer 126: The Indians arrive in Sattagydia, to link up with reinforcements.
Spring 125: The Ligurian Revolt.  Just to compound Rome's problems, the Latin city of Fregellae also rebels.  First stirrings of unrest amongst the Socii?
Summer 125: The Roman army that put down the Slave Revolt in Sicily marches back northwards and reaches Campania.
Autumn 125: Fregellae falls swiftly to a surprise assault as a Roman citizen secretly opens the gates from within.  The town is levelled. The Roman army then moves on into Etruria.
Spring 124: The Romans assault Liguria.

Wednesday, 5 November 2014

Grudge Match: Parthians against Ptolemies

Campaign battle in Palmyra, 129 BC.  The Parthian host has descended upon Palmyra in the hopes of forcing the decaying Ptolemaic Egyptians even further back.  Simon chose and deployed the defending Egyptians, while I constructed and set up the Parthians.  Terrain was mostly open, with a couple of low ridges and two nice orchards.  Photos are taken from the Parthian perspective, mostly from the Parthian left (my command). The Egyptians:
The first photo shows the Egyptian right, the troops directly opposite mine: some Tarentine styled light horse, two units of Cleruchs heavy cavalry, a unit of elephants, and plenty of light infantry support.  Alan commanded these initially, ably seconded by Graham, who took over when Alan had to leave.
Moving along, a large phalanx fills their centre, Malcolm in command (although he isn't in the photo).  Is that a Roman interloper at the right?  Ave!
Keith in command at their right completes their array: elephants, camels, light horse and a load of skirmishers.
Over to the Parthians.  My lot on our left wing: high quality horse archers and cataphracts.  very Parthian.
A slightly fuzzy shot of our centre, I just wanted to show it for the sake of completeness.  Willy runs our Greek city spearmen, most of whom are on a nice big hill, along with some cataphracts and horse archers.  Skirmisher infantry out front.
Our right: Gordon in command.  More cataphracts and even more horse archers.
The opening moves on my wing.
The centre remains strangely static.
Gordon's troops swarm forwards at our right.
A side shot of the whole field at this point, taken from my wing.
Further developments here: I am being very aggressive with my cataphracts, hoping to get the unit at the top centre of the photo well past the elephants to turn the enemy flank.
Not much continues to happen centrally.
Our right continues to advance.
Table shot at this stage.  Now that the Parthians are committed on the flanks, will the Egyptian phalanx advance in the centre?
Alan and I are having a rather civilised little battle on our side of the field, thank you very much.
The phalanx advances.
Gordon starts to swarm Keith's troops at our far right.
Table shot, with some rather desperate combats on my wing.  The battle has settled into a pattern: will either or both of the Parthian wings break through before the phalanx gets to the spearmen on the hill?
Close up and nasty.
My guys are not pushing through the way I hoped.
The phalanx marches onwards.
Gordon swarms even more.
Side angle view shows the relative positions at this point.
A gap has appeared for the enemy elephants.  Now all my cataphracts need to do is finish those pesky Cleruchs: nine dice, needing a 5-6 to hit.  Two hits will destroy them and get me past the pachyderms.  I should score three.
Guess who missed entirely?  Elephants like canned food, apparently.  My wing will not be breaking through...
That phalanx is getting closer.
Gordon is swarming nicely, but Keith is making him pay for it in terms of precious time.
The phalanx is nearly there - time for a hill assault.
With the camels destroyed, Gordon is beginning to win his flank.
I, however, am rubbish.  With no heavy troops left, all I can do is fall back in skirmish in front of the victorious enemy on my wing.  Fortunately, though, they are in no position to turn the flank of the hilltop troops, who are off to the right of the photo above on the other side of the woods.
Contact in the centre.
The phalanx overlaps Willy's left, but it is now open to Gordon's troops.
The last hurrah, as Gordon's guys get ready to go in.

The game finished almost immediately after this - one phalanx unit was destroyed by Gordon's flank attack and the spearmen on the hill took out another for the loss of one of their own, but the Parthians were forced to retire from the field.  The Ptolemaics, however, are in bad shape too, and this is one army that will not be in a position to mount any offensives for some time.  The Parthians, honour satisfied, will head eastwards to pick up reinforcements and finish off Bactria, I think.

Monday, 3 November 2014

On the Painting Tray: November 2014

I just have to do some basing work and that will complete the legion with black shields for my Marian/Caesarean Roman collection.  Next up: next legion - that's another eighty figures plus a mounted legate.