Good stuff, tryrar. That strikes the right tones. Although we should expand Feroshire to Folesden. We've got to be more inclusive these days, you know.
Since we are spending a bit of time still rallying our men, we can also still give orders to Fin and his captains before we take position in the massed cavalry.
Kahn's plan is good for the King as an overall battle plan for an entire army with cavalry advantages--and while a bit metagamey, I still have to assume that the King and his generals were discussing the same battlefield realities and tactical options and came to a similar conclusion. Urist's plan was also a contender, but the problem is that he said that the enemy would charge down the hill while simultaneously explaining the polearm-impaling and cavalry-flanking slaughter that happens next. If the enemy have the same insight, then in their weakened condition, they'll probably opt to stay in a shieldwall on top the hill as per kahn.
Our own flank, however, has a different set of circumstances, with
some light cavalry but mostly infantry. They won't be able to employ the same tactics as the King's horse-centric calculations. Yet to be given a flank is no small distinction and we must bear our duties ably.
Under your command, you have roughly 30 light cavalry, 100 spearmen, 200 halberdiers, 300 archers, 20 peasant billmen, 100 swordsmen, and 100 skirmishers (slings and javelins).
Heavy complement of archers. As Talvara said earlier we can hope to bring them down from hill with an unbearable shower of arrows. Each man should have three sheaves of 24 arrows each--enough to leave a mark, we should hope. Let's dispose our archers and skirmisher on the extreme flank without support appearing behind them. The archers are simply instructed to retreat backward on the path of their advance if charged. The skirmishers are told to retreat into the marsh. The spears and polearms will join the main battle and anchor its ends, the swords will be a reserve behind these, ready to stop a flank but not committed initially. The personal retinue of fifty dragoons and the 30 light cavalry remains behind as the last reserve to exploit what may become an opening.
The orders on our flank proceed as thus...
For this, we need Uther Ren to command his skirmishers and archers into the gap on the flank, skirmishers first, directing the skirmishers that they can retreat into the marsh safely, then leading his archers back the route of advance and reforming them when the enemy is engaged again.
Fin can leave the polearms to an anonymous captain, since anchoring the line requires no finesse. He will command the swords that are to remain in reserve a short while and then tie down the flanking enemy reserves and potentially hurl them into the swamps, where unlike sling-and-dagger skirmishers, their axes and shields will not be a useful combination. (If you've hiked through a swamp, i dare you to get through a calf-deep slorping mess without slipping and getting both hands mucky. I've never managed.)
Oswald will command the retinue and light cavalry, which still have not received orders in the last map pane. They will exploit the tied down reserves to their flank and rear just like the regular archers, only faster and better based on Oswald's judgement.
Let each captain know the importance of his role. In particular, Uther will get a knighthood from this successful manoeuver and the best terms for building his settlement.