Battle of Silla
Battle of Silla | |||||||
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Part of the Kamalbian War (1550-54) | |||||||
Imperial Guard Riflemen at the Battle of Silla | |||||||
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Belligerents | |||||||
Empire of Exponent | Berique | ||||||
Commanders and leaders | |||||||
Quintus Selius | Antoine Escalin des Aimars | ||||||
Strength | |||||||
????? | ???? | ||||||
Casualties and losses | |||||||
TBD | TBD |
The Battle of Silla was the first victory by the Empire of Exponent over the army of Berique during the Kamalbian War 1550-1554. The battle was especially important because it highlighted the importance of Imperial massed gunfire, which was used to devastating affect against the more mixed Beriquois forces.
Background
Battle
Selius met the Beriquois army on a plain outside of the town of Silla, with both sides deploying their troops in typical 16th-century fashion.
The Beriquois army was a mixed force of cavalry, pikemen, and arquebusiers. The cavalry, consisting of heavily armored horsemen and lighter cavalry units armed with lances, was stationed on the flanks of the army. The pikemen formed the center of the Beriquois line, standing in close formation with their long pikes at the ready. Behind the pikemen were the arquebusiers, who were armed with a type of early firearm that was slow to reload but could deliver devastating firepower at close range.
The Empire of Exponent's army, on the other hand, was composed primarily of musketeers arranged in dense formations. The musketeers were armed with the arquebus's successor, a lighter and more mobile firearm that could be reloaded more quickly than the arquebus. The Imperial forces were deployed in a formation known as a "pike-and-shot" formation, with musketeers flanking a central column of pikemen.
The battle began with a cavalry charge by the Beriquois, which was met by a barrage of musket fire from the Imperial forces. The Imperial musketeers opened fire from their tightly-packed formations, shooting volleys of lead shot into the charging Beriquois cavalry. The musket balls penetrated the knights' armor and inflicted heavy casualties on the horsemen, causing them to break and flee.
The Beriquois pikemen then advanced, attempting to break through the Imperial line with their long pikes. However, they were met with a wall of musket fire from the Imperial musketeers, who fired in volleys at the advancing pikemen. The Beriquois pikemen were unable to penetrate the dense musketeer formations and suffered heavy losses.
Despite the withering fire from the Imperial musketeers, the Beriquois arquebusiers continued to fire back, inflicting casualties on the Imperial forces. However, their slow reloading times and the speed of the Imperial musketeers' volleys meant that they were unable to inflict sufficient damage to turn the tide of the battle.