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JoomlaWatch Stats 1.2.9 by Matej Koval
115 Ipsus (301 BC) Print E-mail
( 0 Votes )
66.7 %
Record a victory for BOTTOM ARMY 33.3 %
Total Plays 6 - Last played by on 2010-08-01
Written by GMT Games   

11

May

2008

Ipsus 301 BC

Successors (Antigonus) vs Successors (Seleucus)

Historical Background
By 309 BC, all of Alexander’s heirs had been executed. The Successors ended the pretense of fighting for the restoration of the empire, and proclaimed themselves kings. With the most powerful army of all the contenders, Antigonus made a bid to reunify the empire under his dominion in 302 BC. The other four Diadochi kings had formed an alliance to stop him. The allies met Antigonus’ army near Ipsus. The armies were evenly matched in foot, with the allies superior in horse and greatly superior in elephants. As the battle began, Antigonus’ cavalry charged against one of Seleucus' cavalry wings, routing it. Unfortunately, the Antigonid cavalry pursued too far, and then could not re-enter the battle because they were blocked by Seleucid elephants. This left Antigonus’ phalanx unsupported as the allied phalanx charged forward. Overwhelmed, Antigonus was killed and his phalanx broken. The remaining horse and some of the foot escaped, along with a young general who would make his presence felt later – Pyrrhus. With three kings and three future kings present, this had truly been “the Battle of the Kings.” The 81-year old Antigonus had never before lost a battle. His defeat and death brought an end the first phase of the Successor Wars and dashed any hope that the empire would be reunified.
The stage is set. The battle lines are drawn and you are in command. The rest is history.

War Council

Antigonus’ Successor Army (Use Greek blocks)
• Leader: Antigonus
• 5 Command Cards
• Move First

Seleucus’ Successor Army (Use Eastern Kingdom blocks)
• Leader: Seleucus and Lysimachus
• 6 Command Cards

Victory
8 Banners

Special Rules
Seleucus brought 400 elephants from India to the battle. You will need to deploy a Roman or Carthaginian unit of elephants from the core game as the fourth elephant unit of the Seleucid army.

Last Updated on Wednesday, 14 July 2010 13:44
 
Discuss (1 posts)
Re:115 Ipsus (301 BC)
Nov 12 2008 10:10:03
Eric S. Raymond wrote some comments about this scenario on his webpage. CLICK HERE to read full article.

This was the so-called "Battle of Kings", a pivotal confrontation in the Wars of Alexandrian Succession. I played the Seleucids. Antigonus's cavalry-heavy right moved aggressively against my left, which is what happened historically and completely logical given the order of battle. Ahistorically, my left got handled pretty roughly but did not entirely collapse. The Antigonids later sortied against my right flank and knocked it around pretty seriously as well.
As in the original battle, moving my heavy infantry up the center proved decisive; they inflicted critical losses on the opposing line. My opponent cooperated by using a line command to move his center forward; I think, in retrospect, that this was an error.
I think my opponent's attempts at flanking were entirely correct. The Antigonids need to hit hard, fast, and early while the Seleucids have no retreat room. The OB gives the Seleucids a significant advantage in a general engagement, especially if they can deploy the elephants in their rear line effectively.

This scenario favors the Seleucids slightly, especially since they start with 6 command cards to the Antigonid 5. I don't think I'd change it, though; good tactics and execution by the Antigonids can negate the Seleucid advantage, and that challenge is what this scenario design is about.
#377

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