From
the late nineteenth century, all the way up to World War II, the most commonly
used military rifles in the world were designed and built by Mauser.
One of the three bolt-action rifles I own is a German World War II issue Mauser 98K.
[Update 1/27/24:] A few months ago I saw pictures of Vladimir Putin visiting Germany, and the Bundeswehr honor guard were presenting Mauser 98K rifles. Well, an honor guard isn't a combat unit (at least not in that context) so the rifles are purely ceremonial. Are they issued live ammunition? Somehow I doubt it. In any case it was amusing to see a familiar WWII rifle in a contemporary context.
In
the beginning. Shortly after the
Franco-Prussian War (1871) the Mauser Brothers developed a new rifle. It seems the Prussian’s Dreyse “needle gun” was
much inferior to the French Chassepot design.
Rifles by this point were finally breech-loaded, but it was Mauser which
developed a gun firing a fully-enclosed metallic cartridge (the Dreyse and
Chassepot used a packet of powder which disintegrated when the round was fired)
– although still in black powder.
Early
designs (pre-WWI):
1871. The first design. 11mm black powder metallic cartridge, single
shot. Not a winner.
1871/84. Second design, but with an 8 round tubular
magazine (like lever action rifles have, and the Lebel has – see below).
1886
Lebel. Not a Mauser, but still important: The French
– damn them! – yet again topped the Germans by making the first rifle which
fired a metallic cartridge with smokeless powder. Smokeless powder, as opposed to black powder,
made no smoke, was three times as powerful, and overall much better. It definitely made black powder weapons obsolete
and pushed everyone to upgrade immediately.
The initial Lebel round was 8x51mm round nose, “Balle M”.
1888
Commission. The first rifle in 7.92x57mm (aka 8mm Mauser)
- with smokeless powder. This had an
internal box magazine instead of a tubular magazine. This was actually NOT a Mauser rifle, but is
of historical significance because it established the caliber. The Germans mass-produced this design in a
panic before the kinks were worked out.
Belgian
Mausers.
These were Mauser’s first response to
the Lebel. Fabrique National (FN), the
famous Belgian arms maker, produced the 1889 model Mauser, in 7.65mm and it came
into service in 1892. This was the first
design to use a charger (clip which holds 5 rounds together).
Spanish
Mausers.
The next design, in 7mm (7x57) Mauser,
M1893. The 5 round box magazine was
double-stacked, so the bottom was flush with the bottom of the rifle.
Turkish
Mausers. The Turks initially ordered 71/84s chambered
in their own black powder caliber, then switched over to M1889s in their own
smokeless powder caliber, 7.65x53mm (actually the same as the Argentinians
used), and by WWI had switched over to 8mm Mauser.
Spanish-American War (1898). I mentioned this earlier; the US forces were
using the Krag-Jorgenson bolt action rifle and were unhappy with its
performance relative to the Mausers the Spanish were using. The 7mm Mauser round had a higher muzzle velocity
and flatter trajectory than the .30-40 caliber of the Krag, moreover, the
Mauser could be loaded by stripper clips while the Krag had to be loaded
round-by-round. At San Juan Hill, the
normally outmatched Spanish (who surrendered without a fight on Puerto Rico)
gave the US a bloody nose they would not forget – thanks to the damn Mausers.
Note that these 1893 model Spanish
Mausers also saw service during their civil war from 1936-39, in addition to
Kar98Ks supplied by the Germans contemporaneously. The MG34 made its combat debut in Spain.
Boer War (1899-1902). The Boers got their hands on Mauser rifles,
similar to the Spanish 1893 models. They
also captured Lee-Enfields from the British.
China. The German troops fighting against the Boxer
Rebellion in 1900 brought along the Gewehr 98.
During the Warlord Period (1911-1927) many of the Chinese warlords
imported Mausers or made them under license in China. They were so numerous in China that “Mauser”
became the word for rifle. As noted
below, Mao equipped many of the “volunteers” in Korea (1950-53), who themselves
were leftover Nationalist armies, with leftover Mauser rifles.
** The Poles, Czechs, Bolivians,
Paraguayans, Argentines, and Persians also have a well-known association with
Mausers.
WWI:
Gewehr 98. First
used by German troops in the Boxer Rebellion in 1900. Bolt action with straight bolt handle, breach
loading, smokeless powder, 5 round internal box magazine, with a bayonet lug,
in 8mm Mauser: It was upgraded to the spitzer design bullet in 1905. This was the Imperial German Army’s standard
weapon in World War I, and as such was Mauser’s first mass-produced and
successful design. Since it was so long,
they also developed a carbine version of it, which became popular not merely
with the cavalry, but also the storm troops.
1903 Springfield. While not made by Mauser, it was copied from
them. After the Spanish-American War,
the US wanted a decent bolt-action like the Spanish Mauser, and decided to copy
the design. Mauser sued them, so they
had to pay the Germans a royalty. But
the Springfield wound up as an excellent weapon and well-liked by the
troops. They repaid the Germans the
favor when they went “over there” and shot these rifles at the Huns in
1918.
Later
Designs (WWII)
Kar98K. In the mid-1930s, as Germany re-armed, the
weapons whizzes decided to split the difference between the Gewehr 98 and the
carbine and make one model in between the two in length. This became the standard infantry rifle of
the Wehrmacht (and Waffen SS) and remained in production throughout WWII. Not only Mauser but other manufacturers
combined to produce around 14 million of them by 1945. In addition to the shorter length, the other
major change from the earlier Gewehr 98 is that the Kar98K’s bolt handle is
turned down. This is the model I have,
built in 1942 by Steyr, possibly using camp workers from Mauthausen. Oops.
The
following three designs were not Mauser, but worth discussing as they’re
related to this topic.
Gewehr 43. This was designed by Walther, not Mauser, but
is significant nonetheless. Remarkably,
after all this time (1943), the Germans finally got around to developing a
semi-auto rifle – long after the US perfected the M1 Garand and the Soviets had
(not quite) perfected the Tokarev SVT-40.
It didn’t work as well as expected, and they didn’t produce nearly
enough (400,000) to replace the Kar98K or make a difference on the
battlefield. After the war the Czechs
used it as a sniper rifle. Nowadays
they’re hard to find, and expensive when you do: I saw one at a gun show in Chantilly, and the
asking price was $2400. This model has a
10 round detachable box magazine.
FG42. The Fallschirmjager Gewehr (Paratrooper
Rifle) was actually a full-auto design in 8mm Mauser, which fired from a 20
round box magazine. As such it could be
considered Germany’s equivalent of the BAR (Browning Automatic Rifle). However, its light weight meant the recoil was
a bitch and it was hard to control. It was not popular and not many were made.
StG44. Formerly known as the MP43 (to fool Hitler),
and designed by Haenel. This model fired
a shorter version of the 8mm round (7.92x33).
Since it’s a select-fire weapon (semi- or full auto) shooting a
shortened rifle round, it’s considered the first assault rifle. Like the Gewehr 43 it was produced in modest
numbers (about 426,000) but unlike that weapon it was highly effective and
popular with the troops who received them.
It served to inspire Kalashnikov with his design.
Post-war. Although Germany lost World War II, VE Day
in May 1945 did not stop the Mauser. All
those 14 million Kar98Ks, plus all the variants produced by other countries,
remained in circulation. They were damn
good rifles, and the ammo was still available.
Yugoslavia. Not only did the Yugoslavs inherit tons of
Mausers, they even went into business making their own copy, the M48. Apparently these were still in use as late as
the 90’s Balkans wars. Many of the
Kar98Ks sold at gun shows, or by Mitchell’s Mausers, are actually Yugoslav M48s
– so check the codes.
Israel. How ironic:
the Jewish state used former Nazi weapons to defend itself against the
Arab onslaught in 1948. The Kar98K was
the initial standard weapon of the Israeli Army (before they developed the Uzi).
Korea
& Vietnam. The Chinese and Russians had plenty of
Mausers left over from WWII, so they shared them with the North Koreans and
North Vietnamese. Back in Paris, one of
our friends’ father had served in the US military in Vietnam. Our friend showed us the Mauser Kar98K his
father brought back from that war.
8mm Mauser. 7.92x57mm, also known in the US as 8mm
Mauser, though Mauser itself did not design that particular caliber; it was
developed by a commission in 1888 and originally had a round nose, the Patrone
88. In 1898 the French upgraded their
Balle M into a spitzer design, the Balle D, and guess what: by 1905 the Germans
also changed to a sharp-pointed “spitzer” design (S-Patrone) and kept with that
since. The US liked that design so much
it changed its own .30 caliber round into a spitzer design in 1906, thus
“.30-06”. Chassepot?
Lebel? Balle D? Who knew the French could be cutting edge in
weaponry? Bravo for the Chauchat, which
changed all that.
Although
this was for the most common, other calibers were 11mm, 7.62mm, plus some later
conversions to .30-06 and .308/7.62mm.
Since the Polish produced their own Mausers, in 8mm Mauser, they
actually converted a substantial number of Mosin-Nagants to that caliber as
well.
In any case, 8mm Mauser is
comparable in ballistics to other .30 rounds such as .303 (British), .30-06
(American), 7.62x54R (Russian), and 7.62/.308 (NATO). It was the caliber used in Germany’s machine
guns, the Spandau, the MG08, the MG34 and MG42.
Fortunately it’s still commonly available (I scored some surplus
Romanian ammo) but not as cheap as more popular calibers such as .223/5.56mm or
7.62x39 (AK47).
8mm Kurz. Although there is only one weapon which fires
this round, and I’m not aware of any military which used the StG44 after WWII,
apparently Partisan still sells this caliber.
Accessories. The Germans made bayonets and rifle grenade
launchers for these rifles as well, plus sniper versions. The WWI sawback bayonet was intended for
engineers for cutting, but the Allies didn’t know that: soldiers refused to
carry it, fearing nasty treatment if captured with it. I purchased a standard Kar98K bayonet in
Paris in the 80s, long before purchasing my Kar98K in the 90s: but it fit
perfectly.
An
excellent source book, to which I referred substantially for this blog entry,
is Mauser Military Rifles, by Neil
Grant.
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