|
Total |
Side 1 |
0 |
Draw |
0 |
Side 2 |
0 |
|
Total |
Side 1 |
0 |
Draw |
0 |
Side 2 |
0 |
|
Total |
Side 1 |
0 |
Draw |
0 |
Side 2 |
0 |
Overall Rating, 0 votes |
|
Scenario Rank:
of |
Parent Game |
Franz Josef's Armies |
Historicity |
Historical |
Date |
1914-08-30 |
Start Time |
14:00 |
Turn Count |
30 |
Visibility |
Day |
Counters |
82 |
Net Morale |
1 |
Net Initiative |
2 |
Maps |
2: 103, 6 |
Layout Dimensions |
56 x 43 cm 22 x 17 in |
Play Bounty |
236 |
AAR Bounty |
227 |
Total Plays |
0 |
Total AARs |
0 |
Introduction
|
Having been thwarted in their morning attack, Col. Karl von Stöhr and his Bosnians went forward again in the afternoon, aided by Lt. Col. Arnold Barwick’s 25th Feldjäger Battalion, a mostly-Czech unit from Moravia and the pre-war honor guard at Vienna’s Schonnbrünn Palace. The Cossacks had pulled out of the line during the brief respite from action to be replaced by the newly-arrived 321st and 324th Reserve Infantry Regiments.
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Conclusion
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This time the Bosnians had better luck, securing Dub and the heights in a series of crazed close assaults. The Russian XIX Corps’ after-action report claims that the assault was aided by troops of the Austrian 13th Landwehr Infantry Division; the Austro-Hungarian II Corps’ assessment denies this. With the heights in their hands the Austrians could potentially interdict the retreat of the Russian XIX and V Corps from the battlefield – except that Archduke Peter Ferdinand of 25th Infantry Division had assigned no artillery to Stöhr’s task force. They could take fairly impotent pot-shots with their rifles, but otherwise do nothing but simply watch the Russian escape.
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Austro-Hungarian Empire Order of Battle
Russian Empire Order of Battle