Welcome to my blog!

News from a wargamer with a special interest in the military history of the Balkans. It mainly covers my current reading and wargaming projects. For more detail you can visit the web sites I edit - Balkan Military History and Glasgow & District Wargaming Society. Or follow me on Twitter @Balkan_Dave
or on Mastodon @balkandave@mastodon.scot, or Threads @davewatson1683

Wednesday, 14 May 2025

Arran - Scotland in Miniature

 I live a stone's throw away from the ferry terminal for Arran, but haven't been over for years. It is here temporarily (probably) while the Scottish Government and Peel Ports sort out an upgrade of the port facilities at Ardrossan. Yes, they built a new ferry that was too big for the ferry terminal, and it still hasn't been resolved!

However, the new ferry is an excellent ship, and Arran is a glorious place to visit on a sunny day. It is called 'Scotland in miniature' because it has all the elements that make up Scotland on one island. This includes several historical sites that reflect the island's rich history.

The ferry docks at the main town, Brodick. Our first stop was the Arran Heritage Museum, which I hadn't visited before. This small museum reflects many aspects of Arran life, from the geology and archaeology to the present day. The cafe also has delicious cake! Of particular interest is a display about wartime Arran. I have previously reviewed Colin Turbett's excellent book about wartime Arran and its role in defending the Clyde estuary. 

HMS Fortitude at Adrossan was the main naval base.


Memorial to the 21 USAF airmen who died in a Liberator crash on the island. The map above plots all the crashes.

Commandos trained on the island.

Next stop was Brodick Castle, probably the main attraction on the island. The medieval castle has been largely replaced by a Victorian house in the Scottish baronial style. Napoleon III lived here during his exile and there is a fine collection of Napoleonic medals.



The other castle is at Lochranza on the northern tip of the island. This was a MacSween castle built in the 1200s, and later developed as a royal castle. It's in a stunning location in a bay that would have housed the clan's fighting ships. There was a third castle in the south at Kildonan, but there is little left to see.




We drove down the west side of the island, which has little to see other than a fine view of Kintyre. The last historical stop (there were pubs, cafes and an art gallery!) was Kingscross point, the site of a Viking fort that would have defended their base in Lamlash Bay. King Haakon of Norway's fleet was based here before the Battle of Largs in 1265. The Bay was also used by the Royal Navy in both world wars. There are no remains but the view is excellent.

If you are planning a visit, I would recommend Horace Fairhurst's Exploring Arran's Past, for the history of the island. We are indeed blessed to have such treasures on our doorstep.


Sunday, 11 May 2025

Romania's Russia Scare

 Before my recent trip to Romania, I had brushed up on my Romanian history in anticipation of the museums and battlefields I planned to visit. One aspect of Romania's history I wasn't familiar with was its late 19th-century Russia scare. If this sounds familiar to British readers, it should. We had a similar scare with Russia and the French during the same period, and started building fortifications in response. The Palmerston Forts on the south coast are the best example, including the artillery museum at Fort Nelson.

Romania had been part of the Triple Alliance since 1883, which put it at risk of Russian invasion. The border area, with modern-day Ukraine, was probably indefensible, so in 1887, they started to build a line of forts along the Siret River, known as the Focşani-Namoloasa-Galati (FNG) fortified region. Essentially, a shorter defence line between the Carpathian Mountains and the Danube River. They also built a series of forts around Bucharest to defend the capital. There isn't a great deal of the line to see today, other than the very fine WW1 memorial at Mărășești. 


However, the National Military Museum has a series of Osprey-style booklets, including one on the FNG and another on the Bucharest forts. Only three of the series were on sale, at the bargain price of £10 for all three. I would have bought the whole series at that price.

While the main text is in Romanian, there is a summary in English, and the many illustrations, as well as the colour plates, have English captions. 

The fortifications cost the newly independent state a fortune and were controversial at the time. The designer was German Major Schumann, and the FNG included one fort and 15 groups of armoured batteries. There were more batteries at Galati defending the Danube port. An unusual feature was portable 37mm quick-firing guns, supplemented by 53mm guns and 120mm howitzers. 

53mm Grusson Cannon

There were 18 forts built around Bucharest, with another 18 batteries. This resulted in an 8km gap between positions. The forts had 210mm and 150mm guns in cupolas and disappearing turrets. There were smaller guns and machine guns as well. A railway was built to supply the ring of forts, with a garrison of 33,000 troops. Some of the forts exist today and are still used by the military.

Ironically, the FNG defences had to be reversed during WW1, when Romania left the Triple Alliance and faced an invasion from Austro-Hungary to the south. 


Friday, 9 May 2025

Mussolini's Defeat at Hill 731

 I am on a Greek-Italian War roll. After finishing the new study of the Italian Army in the Balkans, I have been reading John Carr's study of an epic Greek defence of Hill 731 during the Italian Spring offensive of March 1941.


In the Spring of 1941, the Italian leadership needed a victory before the impending German intervention. The plan, devised by General Ugo Cavallero, envisioned a large-scale attack on a narrow, 32 km front in the centre of the Greek positions. The Italian attack aimed to break through the Greek lines, recapture Klisura, and advance towards Leskovik and Ioannina. Key to the Italian effort was a hill known as 731, which stood at the centre of the planned attack. Hill 731 is situated approximately 20 kilometres north of Këlcyrë (Klisura), near the base of Mount Trebeshinë in Southern Albania.

Hill 731 was defended by the 2nd Battalion of the Greek 5th Infantry Regiment, which was ordered to hold its positions at all costs. The Italian attack, observed by Mussolini in person, was launched on 9 March with a heavy artillery barrage and air bombardment, with over 100,000 shells dropped on a 6 km front. Despite repeated assaults by three different Italian divisions, the defenders of Hill 731 held the position. 

Although there is enough context, this is not a broad overview of the offensive. Instead, the book focuses on the small unit fighting on Hill 731. The Italian tactics were not subtle. It was early WW1-style artillery bombardment followed by relentless frontal assaults. If the 'lions led by donkeys' line works anywhere, it is here. The Italians were shocked at how ineffective their artillery was and how good the Greek mountain artillery was in response. The Italians fired 100,000 shells in the opening barrage compared to fewer than 6,000 Greek shells, yet they were more effective. Some Italian attacks were broken up before they got anywhere near the Greek trenches. 

For the Greeks, their Hotchkiss machine guns were important, but so were counterattacks with bayonets and grenades. The defence did not simply sit in their trenches blasting away. The Greek bayonet was twice the length of the standard Italian issue, and they used the Polish WZ.24 hand grenade, which carried a bigger charge.

Italian radio security was appalling, with the Greeks intercepting messages and responding accordingly. Supply was a problem for both sides with the snow and ice, coupled with mud up to the waist on occasions. The Italians tried night attacks, but didn't change their frontal attack tactics. The result was the same as daytime. Casualties are unclear, but the Italians suffered around 5,000, including over 1,000 dead. Greek losses were around 500. Four Italian divisions were rendered useless. 

This excellent study of close combat in WW2 covers an interesting campaign. Sadly for the Greeks, Hitler's invasion outflanked the Albanian positions, and they had to give up Hill 731. 

I have the armies for this campaign in 28mm and 15mm. The Greeks are below. This battle is certainly playable on the tabletop without too many challenges.



Sunday, 4 May 2025

Carronade 2025

 The first big Scottish wargames show of the year is Carronade. It is held in a high school in Falkirk, which is an excellent venue, although parking and public transport aren't great. This year, there was a noticeably better turnout - more games, traders and visitors. As usual, it tailed off in the afternoon, but until then, we only played a couple of rounds of our game. It was great to see wargame friends from across Scotland and talk about the game and wargaming generally.

There were no gaps in the trader areas, and they did steady business. I picked up some paints, basing materials and a couple of books. Thankfully, no figures tempted me as my lead mountain is high enough.

We were running a game based on the Battle of Khotin in 1769, the first significant battle of the Russo-Ottoman War 1768-74. It was obscure enough to get visitors guessing what it was and reading the handout. My Old Glory 'Vlad Castle' got another run out, and is not that far off stylistically from the actual fortress. 





Running a game doesn't give much time to see the rest of the show, but the quality of the games was very high, and these caught my eye.

Possibly my favourite, Industrial WW2 with U-Boats.

A big game of Blenheim.

Alford. An interesting battle, well put together.

Poletsk - 1812 Russian campaign

I have no idea what this is or the rules, but it's interesting terrain.

There were two Samurai games, both visually good.


A fantasy version of Billhooks on a fine table.

Obviously, The Alamo. Swapped notes on using Rebels and Patriots.

The Battle of Tewkesbury.

Nice little Napoleonic naval landing game. Works well as a participation game.

I thought this was the Tradeston club's Thirty Years War game, but it is obviously later and upscaled in 28mm.



As always, many thanks to the Falkirk club. Putting on a show of this size takes a lot of work, and Kenny and the team did a great job.

Thursday, 1 May 2025

Roman Soldier v Dacian Warrior

 This is a new Osprey Combat series book by Murray Dahm on the Dacian Wars AD 85-106. The Dacian Wars are one of my favourite ancient campaigns, and I have just returned from Romania, the Dacians' modern-day home. 


I am generally not a fan of this Osprey series. This is the third book from Osprey that covers the Dacians, and there are similar MAA titles on the Romans of the period. The primary selling point for this series might be wargamers who want enough information in one title to organise the armies and understand the campaigns. That said, Murray Dahm is an excellent ancient historian, and this is a well-researched book full of the latest evidence.

After a short introduction to the region and the opposing armies, Dahm gets straight into the organisation of both armies. It's not the same level of detail as in the MAA series, but it's enough to get the wargamer started. Some nice colour plates help, along with plenty of illustrations. The written sources are, as ever, limited, but we do have Trajan's column, which by Roman standards is a reasonably balanced depiction of the troops and the challenges the Romans faced. The column is still in Rome, but the plaster casts in the National History Museum, Bucharest, are a much better opportunity to study them. Here are a couple from my recent visit.



The Imperial Romans are pretty straightforward, but our sources on the Dacians don't always correspond to the depictions on Trajan's column. In any case, Dacian society seems to have consisted of various tribes under individual rulers who owed allegiance to an overall king. So, there may have been several variations, including the Dacian allies, of which the Sarmatians are a favourite. The archaeology is challenging as the Dacian forts were in the Carpathian Mountains, dense, hilly terrain, even today. On my first visit, the hotel insisted I take an armed escort as the forests I was walking through still had wolves and bears. One controversy concerns how many Dacian warriors used the distinctive falx. The subject of a fine colour plate in the book. The otherwise excellent Warlord plastics box doesn't have nearly enough.

The rest of the book covers the three Roman campaigns. Most descriptions focus on Trajan's campaigns and omit the earlier campaign by Domitian in AD 86. He was defeated at the First Battle of Tapae, and although he recovered to win the second, he couldn't subdue the Dacians. A plus for this book is that Dahm covers the earlier campaigns. 

In Trajan's First Dacian War (101–102 AD), he led a massive Roman force into Dacia, seeking to subdue King Decebalus. After several battles, including another critical clash at Tapae, Decebalus was forced to accept peace terms, becoming a client king of Rome. In the Second Dacian War (105–106 AD), Decebalus's continued resistance to Roman control prompted Trajan to launch a second campaign. This time, the Romans captured the Dacian capital, Sarmizegetusa, and Decebalus took his own life rather than surrender. Dacia was then annexed as a Roman province, bringing great wealth, particularly in gold, into the empire.

The final chapters give a good analysis of the effectiveness of both armies and the aftermath. The usual picture of Roman conquests is one of inevitable victory: the combination of auxiliary forces that provided the necessary skill in archery, light infantry and cavalry expertise, combined with the heavy-infantry prowess of the legions. Analysis of the campaigns against Dacia by Domitian and Trajan reveals that such a picture is false. Roman armies could be defeated, and imperial victories sometimes needed to be hard-fought and were by no means predetermined. Oltean surmises that Trajan’s Dacian expeditions were the "costliest war Romans ever fought, the war involving the highest number of troops and covering the largest area."

This is an excellent starting point if you are new to the Dacian Wars. However, if you have the other Ospreys, there might not be enough new material to justify the purchase.

I have the Dacians and the Romans in 28mm. However, more recently, I have played several games using Strength and Honour in 2mm, which gives a different perspective on the Tapae battles.  



Sunday, 27 April 2025

Master of Gray - Broughty Castle

 Those following my Nigel Tranter rereading project will know that Tranter was clearly intrigued by Patrick, Master of Gray. He wrote a trilogy about him (Montrose only got two books) and featured in two others. 

Patrick, Master of Gray (1559–1612), was a Scottish nobleman and politician who played a notable, though often controversial, role during the reign of James VI of Scotland. Known for his political cunning and shifting allegiances, Gray was deeply involved in the intrigues and power struggles that defined late 16th-century Scotland. He was born into the influential Gray family and became Master of Gray, a title that referred to the heir to the chief of the Gray family. Gray emerged after Mary’s forced abdication and subsequent imprisonment by Queen Elizabeth. Initially a supporter of Mary, his loyalties shifted as he sought to secure his position and favour with her son, James VI. He became an important courtier and diplomat during James VI's reign, although he was dropped by James when he became James I of England.

Patrick's main base was Broughty Castle, just down the Tay from Dundee. I am working in Dundee this coming week, so it would be a good opportunity to visit. It wasn't the Gray family's seat, that was Castle Huntly, not the more famous Gordon castle, but near the village of Longforgan, not far from Dundee. Today, it is Scotland's only open prison. In Tranter's telling, Patrick's father gave him Broughty Castle (granted to the family in 1490) because it was derelict after it had been held by the English during the Rough Wooing. Patrick restored the castle and much more, using it to weave his many plots.


The castle wasn't particularly well defended, but it held a strategic position at the mouth of the Tay. The owner could levy tolls and control the lucrative ferry across the Tay to Fife. There were no road and rail bridges in those days. The castle in Patrick's day would have been the large tower house, although the English excavated a trench to strengthen the landward defences. An English writer who accompanied the English garrison noted the castle's strategic importance;

"it standeth in such sort at the mouth of the river Tay, that being gotten, both Dundee and St. John's Town (Perth), and many other towns else shall become subject to this hold or be compelled to forgo their use of the river."

This photo highlights the strategic position with Fife in the background.

The castle was damaged during the Wars of the Three Kingdoms, and the Gray family sold it in 1666. 

The War Office acquired it in 1860 and rebuilt it with modern gun positions in response to the threat of attack from the Russians and then the French. Submarine miners were also based near the castle. In an emergency, they would lay mines in the Tay Estuary to damage enemy shipping. It was garrisoned in both World Wars with modern artillery.


The castle is a museum today and is well worth a visit.


Friday, 25 April 2025

The Wisest Fool

 The latest in my rereading of Nigel Tranter's novels covers James the Sixth from his accession to the English throne as James the First after the death of Elizabeth. 


Tranter typically narrates the story using someone close to the action. He chose George Heriot, the King's Jeweller and money-lender, in this book. Heriot is an interesting character in his own right. He was the court goldsmith to the Queen, Anne of Denmark, and the king himself. He became very wealthy from this position and more prosperous by lending this money back to the king and the rest of his court. He moved to London along with the court in 1603, at the time of the Union of Crowns, and remained in London until he died in 1624. He is chiefly remembered today as the founder of George Heriot's School, a large public school in Edinburgh. His name has also been given to Heriot-Watt University, several streets and a pub, the Jinglin' Geordie, after his nickname. I walk past (I know, hard to believe!) the pub on my way back to the station from research trips to the National Library. 


James was not the universal choice as Elizabeth's successor, and he must have been a bit of a shock to the English court. There were a couple of early plots to unseat him, including one involving Sir Walter Raleigh. The most famous is Guy Fawkes and the Gunpowder Plot, which Tranter covers in detail and is probably the best chapter in the book. 

James had less luck with his plan to establish a single country under one monarch, one parliament, and one law rather than simply a personal union of the crowns. The English Parliament was strongly opposed, which didn't go well with James, who believed in the divine right of kings to rule—something that would get his successor into more serious difficulties. Parliament also kept him short of cash, so he started a range of financial schemes, including the plantation of Protestants in Ulster. Heriot was the man who helped organise at least some of these schemes.

This is not a Bernard Cornwell-style action story. James was firmly against wars, primarily because of the cost. He championed peace in Europe and ended the long Anglo–Spanish War, and a peace treaty was signed between the two countries in August 1604. Despite the lack of military action, this is an interesting tale of court life under a strange but quite effective monarch. The Wisest Fool in Christendom is an appropriate title.