817 AD
By Mike Demana
![]() |
(This continuing series of reports covers the progress of an ongoing campaign, set in Dark Ages Britain, being waged by a group of Columbus HMGS Great Lakes members. Players plot monthly turns and resolve battles using De Bellis Antiquitatisrules. This issue covers three turns --Autumn of 817 A.D.) Autumn in Britain is when the fields turn golden and the peasant, resting on his scythe, eyes the harvest, knowing its yield determines his survival. Sacks are filled and tribute paid to the local lord. These invariably make their way to the great towns of the provinces -storehouses for Britain's fruits, her wealth. The lords'Lords -- the monarchs of the island's warring kingdoms -- know that control of these storehouses determines their survival, too. So, before the harvest rolls in, the golden fields often turn red as armies clash for control of the provinces. "Northumbria rising"
"A change In weather In the north..." To the north, the Pictish storm that had lashed the north for almost two years, showed signs of letting up. King Ravenhawk collected scattered detachments and cohorts of Strathclyde's army on his march south, forging them into a relief army for the besieged province of Galloway. His defeat at the spear's of the Picts five months ago, and the loss of his capital of Dumbarton Rock, did not deter him. He would win this time. When the two hosts met, Ravenhawk's faced the son of the Pictish king, Prince Nechtan. After an hour of battle, the tattooed tribesmen began to break through the British lines in the center. Then, Ravenhawk's wings turned inward. The overeager Pictish pursuers were ridden down by the famous Strathclyde heavy cavalry. Imminent defeat turned to victory for the king, and Galloway was saved. A month later, his forces even laid siege to Dumbarton Rock, but had to back off when Pictish King Circinn returned with another immense army. The storm had not broken up, but Ravenhawk could see the glimmerings of light between the clouds. In the south, Eorl Aelfred, warleader of Kent/Sussex, was a beleaguered man. the lands of his king were overrun with Danes and Norsemen, and his army was their sole defense. After a failed assault on the walls of Canterbury, where the Danish main army was holed up, he lifted his siege and marched south to brush aside a smaller Danish warband that had ringed Dover. The Danes of Canterbury followed him a month later, though, and trapped between two armies, Aelfred withdrew behind Dover's walls. Good news arrived, though, as the season's winds turned cold. Aelfred's Wessex allies had attacked the Norse holding their southern province of Sussex. Now, he only had two provinces to defend with his one army! "Wessex flexes Its might" Wessex was battling on its own behalf, too. With the fall of the Mercian town of Chester, Wessex gobbled up another Mercian province. She now ruled two, while her Essex and Kentish allies controlled one each. Mercia was little but a husk, with only coastal Lindsey still under its control. Autumn's only other news was the quashing of the rebellion of the Welsh subkingdom of Dyfed. King Owein ruled supreme over the Black Hills, just as Winter's rains first began to appear over the Irish Sea in the West. More Bretwalda Winter 816 A.D. Spring 817 A.D. Summer 817 A.D. Autumn 817 A.D. Winter 817-818 A.D. March and April 818 A.D. May and June 818 A.D. Who Won? Part 1 Who Won? Part 2 Who Won? Part 3 Back to The Herald 29 Table of Contents Back to The Herald List of Issues Back to MagWeb Master Magazine List © Copyright 1999 by HMGS-GL. This article appears in MagWeb (Magazine Web) on the Internet World Wide Web. Other military history articles and gaming articles are available at http://www.magweb.com |