Thursday, February 25, 2016

The Battle of Kozludzha, 10 June 1774, Turkish Rumelia (present-day Bulgaria)

 The Potomac Wargamers assembled in Dunn Loring, Virginia on 9 January 2016 to re-fight the Battle of Kozludzha from the First Russo-Turkish War (1768-1774).

     Empress Catherine II (the Great) has ordered the Empire's boundaries expanded to the shores of the Black Sea.  Lieutenant General Aleksandr Suvorov leads his division of 8,000 into Turkish Rumelia (present day Bulgaria) against some 40,000 Turks under Grand Vizier Abdul-Rezak.  Suvorov catches a portion of the Ottoman army crossing a tributary of the Danube, inland from Varna on the Black Sea.

     The Russians have just cleared a wood line defended by Albanian skirmishers and have entered open ground in front of a ridge line defended by the Ottomans.  Suvorov forms his infantry and begins his advance.  A light rain has begun to fall and the Ottomans are struggling to move reinforcements across the river to support their surprised troops.

  -- Scale:  54mm

  -- Rules:  All The King's Men

  -- Victory Conditions:  to win, the Russians must force a Turkish withdrawal.  If the Turks do not withdraw, it is a Turkish Victory.  If the Russians are forced to withdraw, it is a Turkish Major Victory.


The battlefield looking north -- Ottomans occupy a slight ridge on the left
Albanian skirmishers screen the village of Kozludzha

Grand Vizier Abdul-Rezak and Zagano Bama Pasha - second in command


Sinope Corsairs (warband) hold the Turkish right flank

Major General Kamenskii, Russian second-in-command, pushes forward on the Russian left

Russian medium battery opens fire on the Turkish position

Azaps and the Bostanci Corps jannissaries advance against the Russian center

The Russian dragoons take casualties but continue their advance


Russian jaegers under fire
The Serdengecti "head-risker" elite janissaries move forward

Timely reinforcements:  Turcoman Nomad light cavalry

Russian grenadiers form for the attack


Crimean Tartar sipahi heavy cavalry

The Russian left grinds forward

The Sinope Corsairs refuse to give up their ridge
Chechen skirmishers screen the Cairo Janissaries' advance

Zaporozhian Cossacks -- allies to the Russians; retreat to the woods

Russian dragoons attempt to flank the Ottoman artillery

The grenadiers press their attack in the center

Zagano Bama Pasha views the onrushing Russian juggernaut


Lieutenant General Suvorov, Russian Command, rallies his troops for another go



The Sinope Corsairs charge the Zaporozhian Cossacks


Russian artillery hammers the Ottoman position
Turcoman light cavalry looking for an opportunity to strike



A hot afternoon in mid-January



Tartar horse archers sweep around the Russian left and take a battery in flank

The action viewed from above
The grenadiers press home their attack


The Turkish commanders


The field at game's end



 The scenario pits 14 Russian units against an initial deployment of 12 Ottoman units holding the high ground.  Both armies risk collapse once reduced to half-strength.  The Russians must advance and drive off the enemy before the Turks can bring up reinforcements.  The Turks must advance and force a Russian withdrawal before the worsening rain degrades their more-primitive firearms.

     We played three turns.  Abdul-Rezak brought on three reinforcing units, but the Ottomans were reduced to six units remaining on the field. The Grand Vizier rolled to see if his army would continue the fight, but the test failed.  The Turkish army collapsed resulting in a Russian victory, but purchased at a heavy cost in casualties.  A fourth turn would have permitted the Turks additional reinforcements, likely forcing the Russians to test for army collapse.


     A close-run contest.  Historically, the battle resulted in a major Russian victory, convincing the Sultan to sue for peace and relinquish control of the Crimea.  Today, the village of Kozludzha is known as  Suvorovo

3 comments:

  1. Wonderful Stuff Guys! A fellow 54 freak spotted this and alerted me to it. I have been collecting figures and ideas for figures for the Ottomans for quite a while now, and would love to know more about what you used as sources for the clothing and uniforms, and as the actual figures, please. I recognise many of the latter - eg Barzo Corsairs (I was able to get Ron to bring a load across with him on his last visit to the UK, saving on shipping and the risk of import duty!)
    How did the ATKM rules work out for this one - what do you rate the Ottomans as?

    Again, thanks for sharing a splendid spectacle.

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    1. Thank you Mike. My primary sources for painting the Ottomans were the two titles by Osprey on the Ottoman Empire. The figures were from several sources besides the excellent Barzso Barbary Pirates: Britains-Deetail Saracens, Armies in Plastic Afghans (foot and mounted), Italeri Saracens and Mongols, Hing Fat (Chinese) pirates, Marx recast pirates, Frontline Saracens (metal) as Ottoman commanders, HaT Industries ACW zoauves as Janissaries,and A Call To Arms English Civil War artilleryists converted into Ottoman gunners.

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  2. That is a great assortment of figures and a war not often covered by wargamers. I loved the Charbens guardsmen. I was looking for a follow button.

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