Hmmm...Cordoba stabilized things and won...so adding a tercio to both sides (Cordoba pulls some of the musketeers out of one of them), the battle begins to look like one of those late 30-years-war or even 7-years-war battles where an extravagent flanking move is attempted. Cordoba deploys more forward and Mansfeld tries to go around the other flank on the Roman Road...that's the plan anyway:
Quote from: MengJiao on September 04, 2020, 02:24:34 PM
Hmmm...Cordoba stabilized things and won...so adding a tercio to both sides (Cordoba pulls some of the musketeers out of one of them), the battle begins to look like one of those late 30-years-war or even 7-years-war battles where an extravagent flanking move is attempted. Cordoba deploys more forward and Mansfeld tries to go around the other flank on the Roman Road...that's the plan anyway:
Twenty minutes into the battle (start of turn 2) and things are happening all over the place:
Quote from: MengJiao on September 05, 2020, 06:29:28 AM
Quote from: MengJiao on September 04, 2020, 02:24:34 PM
Hmmm...Cordoba stabilized things and won...so adding a tercio to both sides (Cordoba pulls some of the musketeers out of one of them), the battle begins to look like one of those late 30-years-war or even 7-years-war battles where an extravagent flanking move is attempted. Cordoba deploys more forward and Mansfeld tries to go around the other flank on the Roman Road...that's the plan anyway:
Twenty minutes into the battle (start of turn 2) and things are happening all over the place:
40 minutes in and Cordoba would have to get what was left of his army out of there. I guess that suggests why, by the later 30-years war, sending flanking forces on very round-about approaches was all the rage.
But in a small early war battle, it would be quite devastating: