Promoting the study of military history through the art of tabletop miniature wargaming

Vichy’s Last Castle: Petain’s Puppet Regime in Exile at Sigmaringen

.

.

by Paul St. John Mackintosh

Hardback (6.5×9.5 inches). 241 pages. 2025.

The Vichy government doesn’t get a lot of play among the wargamers community. The British took out most of its navy in 1940. It contributed modest troops to the SS. Its forces in North Africa surrendered after less than a week of fighting in 1942 against the Allied forces of Operation Torch. Then the Germans overran Vichy France.

Yet within the political sphere, Marshal Petain did what he could to maintain the pseudo-independence of Vichy France, even if his efforts proved limited. Not that Petain was effective in all respects, but that he was in a no-win position.

That said, Vichy seemed like a political swirl of republican and fascist egos competing for scraps through four years of German occupation. Internecine political warfare among the French and competing agendas with the Germans mark most of this book. The voluminous and often repetitious excerpts of speeches and letters make for a dull read — at least to me. While accurate for the period, I skipped around the excerpts and text.

In late 1944, despite Petain’s objections, he and his entourage were moved to a castle at Sigmaringen (Germany). For the next five months, French exiles also arrived, where they proceeded to argue protocols and political comebacks. It was all like rearranging deck chairs on the Titanic, so to speak.

As the Allies approached, the Germans tried to move Petain again, but he objected. Indeed, his wife forcefully objected and they were eventually allowed to travel into Switzerland. Post war, the Swiss turned all over to the French — at least those that didn’t escape.

The book contains 18 black and white photos and one black and white illustration.

One typo: “remarkably modem in its approach” (p20) should be “modern.”

Petain was tried and sentenced to death, but deGaulle changed that to life imprisonment. Other members were executed. Some escaped to Italy and Spain and lived out their lives. Others were sent bWW2, ack to France and executed.

While covering a little-covered topic and generally well-researched, it’s not a smooth read and there is little that can translate to the tabletop.

— Reviewed by Russ Lockwood

 

Share:

Article Categories
Recent Posts
Book Reviews

The Man Who Stopped The Sultan

. . by Edoardo Albert. Hardback (6.3×9.5 inches). 229 pages. 2025. Subtitle: Gabriele Tadino & the Defence of Europe Gabriele Tadino emerged as one of the ablest military engineers and commanders during the Italian Wars at the beginning of the 1500s. With an inclination for military matters and taught geometry

Read More »
Book Reviews

Tanker War in the Gulf

. . by Tom Duffy. Hardback (6.5×9.5 inches). 312 pages. 2026. Subtitle: Operation Earnest Will, Diplomacy and Seapower in Practice During the Iraq-Iran late in the late 1980s, the Iranians tried to close the Persian Gulf to shipping, primarily by mining the lanes. The US objected and performed mine-clearing missions,

Read More »
Book Reviews

Broken Eagles: Volume 2

. . by John H. Gill. Hardback (6.5×9.5 inches). 594 pages. 2025. Subtitle: Napoleon’s German Allies and the Campaigns of 1813 Volume 2 covers the Confederation of the Rhine, specifically the 1813 armies of Wurtemberg, Baden, Hesse-Darmstadt, Westphalia, and a number of smaller principalities. Like the first volume, you get

Read More »
Secret Link

Contact an Individual

Please select the individual you wish to email.

Contact HMGS

Please only use this form if you can’t use one of the other Contact Us links.

Contact Outreach

Please only use this form to communicate with the Outreach volunteers.

Contact Membership support

Please only use this form to communicate with the Membership volunteers.

Contact Information Technology

Please only use this form to communicate with the Information Technology volunteers.

Contact Fall In! Exhibitors Manager

Please only use this form to communicate with the Fall In! volunteers.

Contact Fall In! Events Manager

Please only use this form to communicate with the Fall In! volunteers.

Contact Fall In!

Please only use this form to communicate with the Fall In! volunteers.

Contact Cold Wars Exhibitor Manager

Please only use this form to communicate with the Cold Wars volunteers.

Contact Cold Wars Events Manager

Please only use this form to communicate with the Cold Wars volunteers.

Contact Cold Wars

Please only use this form to communicate with the Cold Wars team.

Contact Historicon Exhibitors Manager

Please only use this form to communicate with the Historicon Exhibitors Manager.

Contact Historicon Events

Please only use this form to communicate with the Historicon Events Manager.

Contact Historicon

Please only use this form to communicate with the Historicon team.

Contact Convention Operations

Please only use this form to communicate with the Convention Operations volunteers.

Contact Marketing & Communications

Please only use this form to communicate with the Marketing & Communications volunteers.

Report a Website Issue