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Multiple Item Order Form → Commands & Colors: Napoleonics Expansion #4: The Russian Army

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Commands & Colors: Napoleonics Expansion #4: The Russian Army

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Note: All samples below are from playtest versions, not final GMT game art. GMT Games claims no copyright on these images.

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    The Russian Army is a Coalition expansion for Commands & Colors Napoleonics.

    Russia, was ruled until 1796 by Catherine the Great. It would then suffer under "Mad" Tsar Paul I, until his assassination in 1801, which brought his son Alexander I to the throne. Alexander, in command of a Russian army that was as vast as the territory from which it was drawn, did his best by various treaties and alliances to counter the increasing power of France under Napoleon without going to war.

    The Russian army at the time of Napoleonic wars still had many characteristics of Peter the Great’s regime; senior officers were largely recruited from aristocratic circles, and the Russian soldier was regularly beaten and punished to instill discipline. Furthermore, many lower-level officers were poorly trained. Yet the Russians involved in hostilities with its neighbors - Sweden, Poland, Turkey and Austria - were capable of astonishing feats and total, blind obedience to orders.

    In 1805 Britain and Russia signed an alliance against France. In 1806, Prussia joined the Coalition and Prussia and Russia mobilized for a fresh campaign. After Napoleon’s humiliation of Prussia at Jena, the French Emperor turned his attention to subduing his Russian foe and marched into Poland. After a series of sanguinary battles, the French drove Russian forces out of Poland back to Mother Russia and created a new Duchy of Warsaw.

    In 1812, the Russo-French treaty gradually became strained, as the requirement of joining France's Continental Blockade against Great Britain was a serious disruption of Russian commerce. Bonaparte decided to bring the Russians back into line in June, and invaded Russia hoping to inflict a major defeat on the Russians and force Alexander to sue for peace. The invasion of Russia and the retreat of the French army, as many historians point out, proved to be the turning point in the Napoleonic Wars.

    In 1813 Russia opened the campaign against Napoleon joined by Prussia and Austria, and during the three-day battle of Leipzig, Bonaparte's fate was sealed.

    In this expansion you will find 18 historical scenarios that focus on the Russian Army battles from 1806 to 1814 against Napoleon, plus all the new units you’ll need to field for these engagements.

    -
    Richard Borg

     

    Battles

    1806
    Czarnowo - 23/24 December 1806
    Pultusk - 26 December 1806
    Golymin - 26 December 1806

    1807
    Eylau - 8 February 1807
    Friedland - 14 June 1807
    Heilsberg - 10 June 1807

    1812
    Borodino (Shevardino Redoubt) - 5 September 1812
    Borodino (Borodino Village) - 7 September 1812
    Borodino (Great Redoubt) - 7 September 1812
    Borodino (Utitza) - 7 September 1812
    Polotsk - 18 October 1812
    Krasnoi - 17 November 1812
    Crossing the Beresina - 28 November 1812

    1813
    Leipzig (Wachau) 16 October 1813

    1814
    Champaubert - 10 February 1814
    Montmirail - 11 February 1814
    Craonne - 7 March 1814

    Components

    • 2" spine box
    • 24 page Russian Expansion Rule & Scenario Booklet with 14 historical scenarios
    • 2 Russian National Unit Reference Cards
    • 2 Abbreviated Unit Reference Cards
    • Over 200 Blocks
    • Block Label sheets
    • 1 Terrain Tile Sheet - contains 15 double sided Terrain Tiles
    • 1 Russian Square track and Counter sheet