
Great looking book, lots of eye candy, and as always well presented. Well worth the wait and the expense
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Well was there much in this time all but liek 2 the battles of the polish destruction of 1795 were like under 3,000 except for the city assaults. I could be wrong but it seemed more a serious of small action clashes.Sarmaticus wrote:Slightly surprised no Polish-Lithuanian Army.
Yes, the battles of the Kosciuszko Uprising were small but see http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Battle_of_Ziele%C5%84ce in the Russo-Polish War of 1792. Hofer's Tyroleans and Black George's Serbs get in on less. Btw events in Poland were probably responsible in no small part for the survival of the French Revolution (as they would be again in 1830).hazelbark wrote:Well was there much in this time all but liek 2 the battles of the polish destruction of 1795 were like under 3,000 except for the city assaults. I could be wrong but it seemed more a serious of small action clashes.Sarmaticus wrote:Slightly surprised no Polish-Lithuanian Army.
The Serbians were a late addition - only added because they (once) fielded an army big enough to qualify as a FOGN 'corps'Well I agree about those others not being needed. But Terry is known for his love affair with Serbians...
Also I think that got in to give the turks something to fight rather than proper armies.
The Russian Guard was not at Eylau, but was at Friedland. I don't remember if it was brought across the river. But it was certainly there in reserve. I thought this odd as well. But not critical.bahdahbum wrote:In E&E there is something I do not understand :
1807 Russians .
So if the list represents the army that took part at Eylau and Friedland am I missing something !
Yes, I know that is what it says in E & E. But the authors previously have ruled on this forum that as few as 2 cavalry BGs, without any 3rd BG of any kind, constitute a legal cavalry division - a specific exception to the 3 BGs per division minimum rule that came out of ToN. This exception does not appear in the "bit at the back" of E & E, so I question whether or not the authors intended that it should have been there but somehow was left out or missed (an editorial mistake, in other words) or if the special cavalry division exception was meant to apply only to ToN (perhaps a source of future confusion, but a defensible position).vsolfronk wrote:I believe it is two cav BG plus 1 Horse Artillery (making three) is the minimum....but I can be wrong.
We rules that page 17 was correct - that the cavalry division must contain at least 2 cavalry units and up to 1 artillery unit. We found that there were some armies that couldn't field a cavalry division at all if the minimum was 3 - particularly if the choice was restricted (to shock, heavy, light or guards units). There were a lot of historical divisions that had only 1500-2000 men in them.I believe it is two cav BG plus 1 Horse Artillery (making three) is the minimum....but I can be wrong.
I am a bit lost . I suppose pg 17 is page 171 and that the absolute minimum for a cavalry division is 3 units . Either 2 cav brigades + 1 artillery or 3 cav brigades !that the cavalry division must contain at least 2 cavalry units and up to 1 artillery unit