Showing posts with label Capalan League. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Capalan League. Show all posts

Wednesday, 23 October 2013

Autumn 994 - The Battle of Gnita Heath

It was a fine Autumn day when the armies met on the heath at Gnita. The Tereken army consisted of just 500 hardened warriors, a small mercenary band of Eskelin knights and a handful of youths armed with rocks and slings. The Capalan army numbered the finest spearmen they could field and two lances of the best armoured knights in Talomir.
Naturally, the Tereken army was confident. They would fight and die, and their names would be sung in the songs of the scops forever afterwards.
 As the Capalan general ordered the advance, the Tereken knights swiftly rode to meet the enemy knights. The young men accompanied them, ready to rain rocks on the Capalan knights. Wulf the Mystic and Geir the Unseelie began to chant and the bodies of the dead from previous battles arose beside their position. Gnita Heath was the most common route of advance into Capalan territory and many warriors had fertilised its soil with their bones. Lord Uhtred was determined to take any advantage he could get against the Capalan soldiers. They owed him for the ache in his bones when the winters were cold, which they always were; the wound they had given him before had never quite healed right.
Uhtred cheered as a contingent of Capalan knights were driven back by the Eskelin knights, and swiftly cursed as the Eskelin knights were driven from the field by the Capalan general, who pursued them hotly. His young skirmishers had all been ridden down in the process. No doubt they were already feasting in Valhalla. Meanwhile the Capalan wizards were ineffectually trying to make an incantation work. A cloud of purple smoke over their position suggested that all was not well. Seeing his chance, Uhtred ordered his huscarles to turn about face and charge the enemy knights. With a loud cry of "They don't like it up 'em!" the huscarles lifted their spears and shields and planted them firmly in the bottoms of the Capalan cavalry, who immediately fled, taking their general with them. Suddenly the Capalan army disintegrated. Only the spearmen remained, huddling together for comfort. The captain of the spearmen, seeing that he outnumbered the enemy 3:1 ordered the charge at the rear of the Tereken warband.
The spearmen made contact but the enemy stood firm and fought back even harder. Very soon the huscarles had disposed of the spearmen facing them, while the revenant heroes were being cut apart, but did not seem bothered. Uhtred ordered the about face once more and charged the spearmen. This final charge was too much and the remains of the Capalan army fled. The field belonged to Tereken and Capalan was no more.

Notes
I really expected the Capalan army to carry the day, so I planned to target the enemy general and try to remove him from the field. If I could kill him, then I thought that Tereken might lose the battle but that Capalan would be more likely to capitulate when I rolled national morale. As it happened, Steve chose to charge with the general, which played right into my hands. When Capalan made the Leader Lost test, only the spearmen stood. The average Rep of 3 in the Capalan army is truly appalling and really requires all the troops to stay together in contact with as many of their own as possible. This makes the army unwieldy, but is necessary to prevent the kind of disintegration that happened.

This battle was also notable for the sudden success of my Magic Users. I am not a great fan of Magic Users in RrtK because I think that you need too many of them working together for them to be cost effective, but the stand of undead that I raised was well worthwhile, and a single successful blast spell against the Capalan knights made the difference between rout and victory.

Saturday, 16 February 2013

Spring 993: Godwin prevails!

Capalan had invaded Tereken!








The wizards helped by casting healing spells and one blast on the guards, which may have made the difference. They tried Icy Finger of Death twice, but Bonaduce shrugged it off both times. Godwin really saved Tereken's bacon.

Thursday, 27 December 2012

Day of the Knights

Brother Cedric sat astride his mount looking down the hill at the assembled army of Tereken. They should have been out scouted by the nimbler force but this di Resta fellow had turned out to be quite an able commander. Using his superior knowledge of the terrain he had outmaneuvered Lord Uhtred and set up an attack on the invading force. The wily Tereken commander had done his best to pick a difficult field of battle for the Knights of Capalan.








Godwin almost carried the day for Tereken, but the stalwart knights of house di Resta defeated the foe and carried the day.

Saturday, 1 September 2012

Summer 991 - The Battle of Lake Corpuscento

The Altengard army switched its line of attack from the areas around the Sea of Strife to the mountainous regions in the north of Capalan. They brought the Capalan army to bay near the shores of Lake Corpuscento. Both armies deployed on hills facing each other.
 Early manoeuvring in the battle saw the skirmishers of both sides attacking each other. The Capalan skirmishers were supported by Vittorio the Victorious. While they pinned the enemy, Vittorio drove in on the flank and routed all the Altengard skirmishers.
 
 Seeking to offset the loss of their skirmishers, the Altengard general ordered all his troops forward at the double, sending his light cavalry forward to harass the right of the Capalan line.
 The Capalan skirmishers returned to the fray as Vittorio caught his breath. Capalan archers advanced on the left flank in a bid to break up the Altengard charge. It worked.
 The archers were routed but the charge was broken and the Capalan knights were able to do damage to the now isolated Altengard troops facing them.
 Then the Altengard infantry charged up the hill against the Capalan infantry, who suddenly all remembered that they had left pizza baking at home. As one they fled before the enemy's charge. The Capalan general and his city knights were now alone on the hill.
The Altengard army regrouped on the hill. At this point the skirmishers and Vittorio managed to return to the fray. The skirmishers harassed the enemy while Vittorio charged onto the hill and drove straight through an infantry unit.
Vittorio's blood was up. He charged the enemy general and his knights. The Capalan general's unit was badly mauled (blue circle). It and the supporting skirmishers would take no further part in the battle. The Altengard general was holding his own against Vittorio.
The fight on the hill went on as the Altengard infantry struggled to manoeuvre into position to support their leader. It was all in vain. Vittorio's sword lashed out and struck the Altengard general down. His unit routed and with it the rest of the Altengard army. The battle was won for Capalan.

There were no permanent losses on either side and both sides retained their full national morale, so the Capalan League will now counterattack into Altengard territory.