- 1632 series battles
This is a chronological list of armed encounters, skirmishes, and pitched military battles as reported in the nearly twenty book-length works of the best selling
alternate history "Ring of Fire series" created byEric Flint in the year 2000 novel 1632 and its sequels.:"This page is currently badly out of date as is the ongoing work to add synopses for the series works as a whole."
About the
1632 series The novel was written as a stand-alone experiment but soon under pressure to produce a sequel, became a
shared universe series and an exercise incollaborative fiction "on steroids" growing at six or more book length works per year. Having captured an immense following and taken advantage of a nurturing publisher with a dynamic author-to-fan talk forum to collectively brainstorm about the ramifications of the excellent historical research and premise in the novel 1632, the over-scheduled creatorEric Flint decided the best course would be to get some help and solicited manuscripts for what became ROF-1 while concurrently co-writing with best selling authorDavid Weber the first novel sequel 1633. By the middle of 2004 all the books currently in print were outlined and slotted into niches in the series—which to the dismay of fans suffered delays while the two lead writers tried repeatedly to synchronize their schedules close enough to write 34TBW, which lead a parade of titles where the release was held up least plot details be ruined. Subsequent titles will likely not suffer similar delays, but the number of titles released in a given year is limited by agreement between Flint and the publisher.Battles by the New United States
The NUS!32 was the up-timer name for their revolutionary republic formed towards the end of 1631 in the novel 1632, when the displaced Americans of Grantville earned goodwill in central Germany by forming a loose alliance with Gustav's cavalry forces under
Alex MacKay after the dialog exchange:::"Tilly's beasts are pouring into Thuringia. They will be taking the larger cities soon, then plundering the countryside like locusts. I cannot possibly stop them, not with my few hundred cavalrymen. But—" His eyes fixed on Michael's revolver. I5Suddenly, startlingly, Michael clapped his hands together. "Oh—"that" kind of alliance!" he exclaimed. Michael was grinning from ear to ear. The sheer good humor of the the expression, for all the ferocity lurking in it, was like pure sunshine. I5"Sure, Alexander Mackay. "We accept" ::::— "conversation between Alexander Mackay andMike Stearns in 1632"
Battle of the Farm House
:"Setting: "At an outlying farm in
This was a three phase
Sending Frost back for medical care, the
As Nichols switches his attention to the wife, four more soldiers canter up on horseback and shout something in a foreign language that sounds like it might have been Spanish. When confronted by the Americans who form up in a line, the mounted men flee saying they "weren't being paid enough for this". They were supposed to be guards for the carriage which is careening along just behind, in which the Doctor 16char|Balthazar|Abrabanel and his daughter
:"Aftermath: "The farmer and his wife are rescued as are Ms. Abrabanel and father and evacuated back to Grantville. Rebecca had been raised mostly in England during the 1600s and she is able to communicate well enough despite period and dialect differences, and she briefs the townspeople on the local situation and date. The town, whose inhabitants are now alerted to the dangerous times they are encountering, puts out patrols keeping the UMWA posse in-tact and expanding it under Stearns, and the town fathers, with recourse to historical references and the knowledge of teachers like 16char|Melissa|Mailey, are forewarned, take what steps seem sensible but quickly decide that the whole town needs to meet. The geographical extent of the ROF is quickly surveyed and fortuitously is found to not have a lot easy access to the terrain surrounding Grantville, which is assessed to be a nearly perfect circle between six and seven miles (11 km) in diameter, pretty nearly centered on the down-town church and business district along either side of 16plac|Bufallo Creek. An emergency town meeting is scheduled and held three days after the ROF, during which the town organizes a 16inst|Emergency Committee to govern the town during the near future. The UMWA miners set up a watch and patrol and during its first meetings the Emergency Committee formalizes forming a military contingent around the core of UMWA veterans of Korea and Vietnam. A
Battle of the Crapper
Timeline: circa June 29th—30th, 1631, in the novel 1632 [Cite Sm|Flint, in 1632 | Best text evidence suggests June 29th or 30th, during the discussion later on in the 16inst|Emergency Committee Cabinet about trying to talk 16char|Jeff|Higgins into delaying the wedding four days to 16char|Gretchen|Richter until July 4th, et al.
]
also known as The Battle of Badenburg
This battle introduces Hans Richter,
Jackson and Stearns deploy the main American strength in the center of a fortified position across the road to Badenburg about half-a-mile from the town walls. Riflemen dug in, and a
Ernst Hoffman is a Protestant mercenary leader whose band of "goons" has been extorting and lording it over the citizens in the walledcite 1632 Battle of Crapper Lane Timeline: Mid-summer, 1631; in the story GG01|in="Curio and Relic"This battle was too serious to call a skirmish, and occurred when 16char|Eddie|Cantrell and 16char|Paul|Santee, the NUS'32 Arms Czar set out to test Battle of Breitenfeld Timeline: The Battle of Breitenfeld did not properly involve Grantville or any of its citizens, but Flint spent three chapters of 1632|i on it both to educate the reader about the armies of the day, and to thoroughly introduce not only the key The fictionalization of the account of this battle is primarily limited to development of Gustuvus II and his staff and Generals via dialogs between participants. The resulting word picture is a gestalt of the known historical (post-mortum or after action reports and many years of informed debate on this world shaping event) facts interleaved with the character building which became the series' depiction of the personality and behavior of Gustavus and several other figures who also play a part in the series. The author Flint becomes the tutor and historian presenting a summary of various arguments and counter arguments bandied about in military history circles these last 350 years. He introduces the pivotal nature of this battles outcome (It would in later years be enshrined as a defense of freedom of belief for all the world complete with monuments and a statue of the Swedish king) and demolishes various myths and points made over the centuries by this or that theorist, and uses the whole to build a picture of warfare of the Having established the broad outlines of conflict of the day and educated the reader Flint next introduces a somewhat flamboyant Gustavus peering nearsightedly over the early battle and regaling his staff, which includes three of the four Dukes where Grantville is located in the scene indirectly explaining why Grantville hadn't been in any conflict with local high ranking nobility from the start—all four dukes are off far to the north with Gustavus' army separated from their duchy by Tilly's army. The second chapter concludes with the collapse of the Swedish left when the Saxon allies break and flee. Gustavus seizes the moment while being encouraged by his staff to retreat. In a flurry of orders, he has his army refuse the flank on the left even while Tilly has ordered his cumbersome General Horns Swedish forces successfully refuse the flank and stymie the advancing Catholic forces in the cumbersome tercio's, locking them up and blocking their ability to advance. 16CHAR|Lennart|Torstensson|p=General Torstensson's vastly superior artillery begin pounding the Catholic infantry who become stalemated with Horns and the Swedish center and Tilly is powerless to prevent Gustavus's exploitation on the Swedish right flank as his cavalry had been driven from the field by the more disciplined forces using early Battle of Jena crossroads "'Timeline: In the novel 1632, ca. October 1631>Cite 1632 :I"Its Collegium Jenense had been founded in 1558 with the help of the protestant reformer Jena Pimp Incident "'Timeline: In the novel 1632, ca. October 1631Ibid] 1The Jena Pimp Incident involves the formidable 16char|Gretchen|Richter and her first efforts at planting the seeds of a fifth-column thenceforth known as the CoC's in the nearby small city of 16plac|Jena. Gretchen is dropped off by her husband 16char|Jeff|Higgins having accompanied the NUS!32 Army passing outside the city on the way to the ambush they would set up at 16batl|Battle of Jena crossroads. Gretchen contacts several women she knows in Jena but is eyed leaving the city gates by a human predator, 16char|Max|Jungers who is described by Flint as a: "Local tough. Hooligan. Thief. Cutpurse. Would-be pimp."—and one well known to the women Gretchen is meeting with as "trouble". Since Jungers has sought out Gretchen, apparently planning on 'Having his way with her', Gretchen exclaims, "Well, then. I should go speak to him. Since he came all this way to see me." [Cite Sm|Flint, "1632", pp. 313 as quoted] Gretchen leaves suddenly striding out to confront the low-life. I5"Shit!", exclaimed 16char|s=Mathilde again. "There's going to be trouble!"i5Her cousin 16char|s=Inga nodded sadly. "It's too bad. I liked Gretchen."I5Mathilde stared at her. "Are you mad? Don't you understand "yet"?" [Cite Sm|Flint, "1632", pp. 313 as quoted plus:|q="Three seconds later she was striding out of the shack. The women watched her go, gaping. They squatted, for a moment, before the reality registered. Like a little mob, they rushed to the door and stared out.iMax Jungers sure enough. He had apparently been lurking at the corner.] Gretchen stops fifteen feet from Jungers who leers and begins to say something fresh but is interrupted by Gretchen: "Did you see my husband?" Jungers broke off. For an instant his face was still. Then, just as quickly the leer was back More of a sneer, really. I5"The Big Fat one? Not worried about him."I5"No reason to be," agreed Gretchen. She nodded, then smiled. The smile was very thin, like a razor.I5He would have tried to reason with you. That's why I love him so." Gretchen reached into her Jungers looked on, uncomprehending when Gretchen takes a two handed shooters stance after calmly working the slide to chamber a round. A moment later Max Jungers and his dirk would trouble no-one, particularly women on the edge, any more. Gretchen repented a bit for using her first shot to wipe the leer off his face, Chief of Police 16char|Dan|Frost would not have approved. [Cite Sm|Flint, "1632", pp. 315 as quoted plus:|q="...but Dan had trained her to go for the body mass shot.I'No headshots unless they're wearing armor,' he had insisted, over and again. IGretchen was feeling a little guilty. She just hadn't been able to resist wiping that leer away."] Gretchen then insists the city watch be called and that there be an investigation. When the victorious army train returns conducting hundreds of prisoners the second concrete example giving evidence of Stearnsian calculating influence, anticipating the event or one like it comes to the fore. "Bad," muttered Mike angrily. "Very bad!" He glared at the cluster of frightened notables. "One of our women "molested"—after not more than "a few hours" in this town? Just visiting old friends and distant relatives?"I5He snarled. "Very bad!" Then visibly restraining his fury: "But—No doubt the town itself was not responsible." The luminaries eagerly agreed, then agreed again when Stearns proposes that perhaps the Americans could help them police the rif-raf of the town—after first all but leveling a tavern where sacrificial lambs— "Friends? Accomplices?" as asked for by Stearns— usually hole up. The American APC32 is impressive, the bombs and rate of rifle fire intimidating and impressive. Perhaps, Stearns dissembles, the town fathers could use some help patrolling the streets and suppressing the less reputable members inflicting themselves on the town. "Wanderbar!", and by the way, why does your flag have that huge field of blue and but a single white star? The star is Grantville, explains Stearns, the field is so large to contain the other towns that may perhaps wish to join the NUS'32. "Already, Brandenburg is thinking of doing so, and then we'll have two stars." Battle of Eisenach-Wartburg This was a short campaign of two battles on successive days when the authorities in the Spanish Netherlands were manipulated into attacking the upstart American republic forming in Thuringia. The Spanish, accompanied as always by members of the Battle of Eisenach Battle of the Wartburg Timeline: ca. June 1632, at Battle of Grantville Battle of Grantville High This battle takes place when a group of mercenaries attack the town high school. The students and teachers gather in the gym to defend the school. The high school science teachers, along with others, perish in this fight, however the students and teachers manage to fight off the mercenaries. Battles under the CPoE Following Gustavus's victories over 16char|Count of|Tilly|s=Count Tilly at Breitenfeld and Flint's treatment is the relief of the 16batl|Siege of Nürnberg by the combined armies of Gustavus and the NUS!32 at the very end of the novel 1632. In the battle, Grantville's APC32|1s storm the imperial siege lines and create a breakthrough while 16char|Julie|Mackay wounds 16CHAR|Albrect von|Wallenstein|s=Wallenstein, near-fatally, at extreme long rifle range (circa m to ft|1000|wiki=yes|Abbr=no. Julie manages to kill a General on Wallenstein's staff with her first shot which is pushed off by the cross-wind at the extreme range. A subsequent shot hits Wallenstein, but having gone subsonic as it reaches across the long distance, tumbles before it hits and hits Wallenstein in the mouth, which sets the stage for the ROF-1|s="The Wallenstein Gambit in ROF-1. Siege of Luebeck * See 16plac|Luebeck 32FC|para placed into In literature Both arms of the bight and the three ports, Defense of Luebeck Timeline October 7th-12th(?), 1633 in the novel 1633 [Cite Sm|Flint and Weber, in the novel 1633, pp. ___ .] The Defense of Luebeck, or more formally, the Naval Defense of Luebeck was an ad hoc delaying action by USE up-timers using higher technology to foil a close blockade of the port of Battle of Wismar Timeline The battle of Wismar (or Battle of Wismar Bay, or Battle of Wismar and Rostock) was a combined sea-air defense of the Battles under the USE The 16batl|Battle of Wismar fomented an internal crisis pitting the rising feelings of nationalism against the interests of the nobility that came to a head in the capital city of 16plac|Magdeburg the day after the news of the heroic death of 16char|Hans Richter reached the capital by radio. 16char|Mike|Stearns, as the President of the odd NUS!32 which has Gustavus as "Protector-General Gars" (1632) of the nobility-hamstrung CPoE acted to head off the incipient riot and characteristically, "stumbled forward" using the crowds mood and reports from Gustavus's trusted General 16CHAR|Lennart|Torstensson to negotiate a new governmental setup, the USE, by radio in a marathon bargaining session. Stearns becomes the new Outside of small unit clashes, the northern European theatre had little happening outside the ongoing siege of Luebeck, though Stearns decided to authorize one mission to send an unmistakable message as 1634 wanes. Raid on Paris Timeline winter 1633-44 in the story GG02|in "Collateral Damage" In revenge of the death of 16char|Hans|Richter in the 16batl|Battle of Wismar, Chief of Staff of the 16inst|New United States Air Force struggles against weariness and fatigue during a long uncomfortable flight and a threatening thunderhead in a plane ill equipped to power above the turbulent air of the storm system advancing across eastern France. He manages both and bombs Paris, with 16CHAR|s=Cardinal Richelieu watching from the balcony off his office. His bombs score direct hits— and thousands of propaganda leaflets deal a blow to the French monarchy in revenge for the Cardinal's engineering of the 16inst|League of Ostend. gazettes 1 gazettes 2 gazettes 3 Massacre of the Channel Pirates ;or Massacre on the English Channel Timeline: January 1634 in the novel 34TBW [cite 34TBW|author=Flint and Weber|Ch="Chapter 12-13" of 34TBW|pp= 122-139; date and quote on pp. 138|q=I [On Algerine Pirates picked at random surviving without a boat] I'... the narrowest stretch of the Strait of Dover which was still many miles away. And he was dead sure they hadn't done it in January. Maybe if he were wearing a wet suit...'] 16char|Harry|Lefferts, Captain in the United States of Europe Secret Service and U.S. Army leads a co-ed team of mixed international backgrounds into England in small boat across the Raid on the Wietze oil fields Timeline: Early spring 1634 in the novel 34TBW [cite Sm|Flint and Weber, "Chapter 49-50" of 34TBW, pp. 509-526] Newly minted Battle of Kiel ;or "Schooling of the French Frigate Raileuse"Timeline: Early spring 1634 in the novel 34TBW [cite Sm|Flint and Weber, "Chapter 48" of 34TBW, pp. 496-508] In this brief battle, a headstrong French Frigate captain learns that the power of just two explosive carronade shells is more than a wooden ship can take. He also learns his eighteen pound cannon are totally ineffective against the United States Navy's despite out scoring the Americans four hits to two. The battle comes to an abrupt end as the aft hitting shell flares up into a fire which threatens to engulf the ship in short order—fire was always a problem in wooden ships for even most things that weren't wood were covered with tar and pitch (Oakum) as preservative against water damages. Battle of Mecklenburg Bay ;or Battle of Luebeck Bay Timeline: Early spring 1634 in the novel 34TBW [cite Sm|Flint and Weber, "Chapter 52" of 34TBW, pp. 536-544] The naval action in the Escape from the tower Timeline: January through slightly later spring 1634 in the novel 34TBW [cite Sm|Flint and Weber, "Chapter 11, pp. 109— and others through the escape itself in Chapters 53-57" of 34TBW, pp. 545-583] ;Setting – Inside and outside the This battle (or event) title was at one time plotted to be a novel title, but Flint decided to shuffle outlined plot elements around between books into new groups when he and David Weber were unable to get together writing in their second attempt to schedule a mutually agreeable time-window (The third window of opportunity was the charm). In this story, the USE embassy party that has been interred for well over six months (imprisoned summer 1633 to early spring 1634) in the Battle of Ahrensbok Timeline: slightly later spring 1634 in the novel 34TBW [cite Sm|Flint and Weber, "Chapter 56-58", inclusive of 34TBW, pp. 584-610] This battle is detailed mostly from the point of view of Sargent 16char|Thorsten |Engler and his observations as part of the new USE army's 16inst|Flying Artillery units. ... Battle of Copenhagen Timeline: later spring 1634 in the novel 34TBW [cite Sm|Flint and Weber, "Chapter 52" of 34TBW, pp. 536-544] The Battle of Copenhagen was detailed in 34TBW when Admiral Simpson took his Ironclads and timberclads into Copenhagen using a southern approach, thus by-passing a mining effort put down by the minions of king Within the Battle of Copenhagen, the whole action after the torpedo boats devolved into a demonstration of the futility of resisting the USE naval force by reducing the 16plac|Castle of Copenhagen to rubble in a bombardment. The scene was given some gravity by negotiations before and after between Simpson and King Christian IV, and the bombardment itself was both hair raising and comic in that the prisoner 16char|Eddie |Cantrell had been incarcerated in the castle as punishment for misleading Christian during drunken attempts to pump him for information, particularly regarding technologies. Notes and references ;References
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pp=p.136|Chapter 16|q=Unusually for a town of its size—the population was less than six thousand—Badenburg was walled. Those walls as much as anything else, had determined Mike's political tactics over the past two weeks. [from the day of the alliance with 16char|Alexander|Mackay, making the 16batl|Battle of the Crapper in mid-to-late June 1631.] ] town of 16plac|Badenburg under the guise of protecting the inhabitants. They have done absolutely nothing to protect the region outside the towns walls, and Mike Stearns decidesIbid] that they will do for the up-timers first act of liberation. [cite 1632
pp=p.136|Chapter 16|q=Mike shrugged. "I'm not counting on Hoffman's goons at all. I just insisted they be here in order to get them out of the town.">cite 1632
pp=p. 137|Chapter 16|q=Mackay still hadn't gotten over his shock, once he realized the full extent of Mike's intentions. Defeating Tilly's mercenaries was only the first part of those plans. "Liberating" Badenburg, Mike had explained, required dealing with the Protestant mercenaries as well. Decisively and, if necessary, ruthlessly. Even Lennox, for all his grisly experience, had been impressed by Mike's cold bloodedness.] The band of about 500 is enticed from behind the town walls to participate in the 16batl|Battle of the Crapper and breaks to run before the action is fully joined. Flint uses the roughly
q= [refering to the slowly marching
q="Word of 16plac|Breitenfeld reached Grantville toward the end of September... erupted in celebration... two full days. Sweden's great victory a
pp=p. 291, 292|ch=Chapter 37] 1Flint uses the occasion of the demise of the 16CHAR|Count of|Tilly's army at
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