Take up musket and sabre, and ready your forces for action. There, my lord is your enemy! There are your guns! Attack! The Charge of the Light Brigade at Balaclava, immortalised in verse by Lord Tennyson, will forever stand as a shining example of military incompetence and aristocratic blundering. For many people, this single, bloody episode is the sum of their awareness of the Crimean War – to quote Marshal Bosquet, however: “C’est magnifique, mais ce n’est pas la guerre” …
Half a league onward,
All in the valley of Death
Rode the six hundred.
“Forward, the Light Brigade!
Charge for the guns!” he said.
Into the valley of Death
Rode the six hundred.”
– Tennyson
The Charge of the Light Brigade by Caton Woodville
Crimean War 1853-1856
The Crimean War was fought between October 1853 and March 1856. Imperial Russia was keen to expand into the ailing Ottoman Empire, and this aggression drew in Britain and France, intent on maintaining the balance of power in Europe, and restoring their national prestige, respectively.
The Kingdom of Sardinia, keen to gain recognition in the eyes of Britain and France, joined the alliance, while Greece attempted unsuccessfully to make gains from the Ottoman Empire. The war saw the great powers of the age funnel men and materiel into a barely ordered organisational nightmare, punctuated by slaughters that presaged those of the American Civil War less than a decade later.
It also saw ancient foes in Britain and France fighting alongside each other less than half a century after the Napoleonic Wars tore across the Continent. Officers who had faced each other in the first half of the century now found themselves comrades in arms.
As a Wargame
With (now-rifled) muskets, cavalry charges, and direct-firing field artillery remaining the weapons of choice, and battles still adhering closely to the regulated formula of the Napoleonic Wars, the Crimean War is ideally suited to the Black Powder ruleset.
Our exciting new range of figures allows the gamer to faithfully recreate historical engagements (albeit perhaps with slightly more competent commanders!), and answer some of the great “what if” questions of the war. What if Captain Nolan had instructed the Earl of Cardigan to attack the correct Russian guns, or if the Russians had been able to repulse the French assault on the Malakoff Redoubt?
Pull on your coat and shako, take up musket and sabre, and ready your forces for action. There, my lord is your enemy! There are your guns! Attack!