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these cartridges and had them re-loaded with a special faster-burning powder in new brass cases. Luger brought 746 rounds of this new ammunition to the March 1907 trials with his .45 Luger pistol. Two test .45 Luger pistols, bearing serial numbers 1 and 2, are known to have been used in the 1907 tests. Although the .45 Luger passed the firing tests, it was ranked below the Colt/Browning and Savage pistols in number of malfunctions and misfires, though Army officials conceded that the .45 Luger performed satisfactorily with the DWM-loaded ammunition: "The Luger automatic pistol, although it possesses manifest advantages in many particulars, is not recommended for service tests because its certainty of action, even with Luger ammunition, it is not considered satisfactory, because of the final seating of the cartridge is not by positive spring action, and because the powder stated by Mr. Luger to be necessary, for its satisfactory use is not now obtainable in this country." DWM and Luger later rejected an invitation by Army officials to produce 200 pistols in .45 caliber for further competition against the Colt and Savage submissions, at which point DWM effectively withdrew from the U.S. trials.
1302:. This version of Georg Luger's design reflected a number of improvements requested by German military authorities. The grip safety used on earlier versions was omitted, while a lug was attached to the heel of the pistol frame for attachment of a shoulder stock. The barrel was reduced in length to 4 inches (102mm), and the caliber was 9×19mm Parabellum, and the 9×19mm DWM cartridge (Catalog No. 278F) initially adopted by the German Army featured a 123-grain truncated-nose bullet design intended to increase wounding effect of the fully jacketed bullet. With slight modifications, notably the addition of a stock mounting lug and a hold-open latch, the P08 would serve as the German Army's principal sidearm during World War I, augmented by Mauser C96 and Model 1914 pistols. Over 2 million Luger pistols were used by German forces from 1914 to 1918.
2046:: The U.S. Ordnance Board purchased 1,000 Model 1900 7.65mm pistols under an official military contract order in 1901 and issued them to active duty cavalry troops for field testing. Most were distributed to U.S. Cavalry troops involved in police actions in the Philippines and Cuba. As the American Cavalry troops had used .45 and .38 revolvers for over 30 years, the small caliber, complex Luger, was viewed with some suspicion and not readily accepted. There were complaints as to small caliber, safety while riding from horseback, and unreliable action. As a result of these reports 50 Lugers in caliber 9mm were briefly tested by the Army in 1904-1906 and three Lugers in .45 caliber were tested in 1907. The Luger was rejected by the U.S. Army in favor of the Colt M1911. In 1905-1907 the Springfield Armory called in most of the M1900 Test Lugers.
1039:, but ever-growing wartime demands for handguns resulted in continued P08 production by Mauser until December 1943. Mauser production was supplemented by a small contract for Luger pistols given to Heinrich Krieghoff & Son of Suhl in 1935 to produce a Luger variant for the Luftwaffe; a second contract for 15,000 pistols was only partially completed when Krieghoff ceased Luger production in 1944. The German Army took their last delivery of 1,000 Mauser-made pistols in November 1943. A further 4,000 pistols assembled by Mauser in December of that same year were sold to Portugal, which renamed them the Model 943. German military authorities refused to take any more Luger pistols, leaving a large stock of parts at the factory in Oberndorf.
914:. After a round is fired, the barrel and toggle assembly travel roughly 13 mm (0.5 in) rearward due to recoil, both locked together at this point. The toggle strikes a cam built into the frame, causing the knee joint to hinge and the toggle and breech assembly to unlock. The barrel strikes the frame and stops its rearward movement, but the toggle assembly continues moving, bending the knee joint upwards, extracting the spent casing from the chamber, and ejecting it. The toggle and breech assembly then travel forward under spring tension and the next round is loaded from the magazine into the chamber. The entire sequence occurs in a fraction of a second and contributes to the above average mud resistance of the pistol.
1095:. During the immediate postwar period, complete Luger pistols were also assembled from rejected or salvaged parts with different serial numbers, then sold as souvenirs to occupation forces in Germany. Thousands of original Luger pistols were taken home by returning Allied soldiers after both world wars. Other Luger pistols were later assembled in the United States by gunsmiths of varying aptitude using secondhand, rejected, or salvaged parts imported from Germany and other countries. These pistols and their construction quality (or lack of it) would contribute to criticism of the Luger as a finicky and unreliable weapon. However, a well-maintained Luger with new springs and suitable cartridges is a very reliable weapon.
1535:: Three types of pistols were purchased from DWM.: The 7,65mm obrazetz 1903 (Old Model) was acquired in comparatively small numbers in 1903-4 and featured the distinctively cutaway toggle grips and a 4.75-inch barrel. The 7,65mm Obrazetz 1908 (New Model) was supplied between 1908 and 1909, and had flat-face checkered toggles; around 1,500 were ordered. The 9mm obrazetz 1911, was a 9mm pistol with a 3.9-inch barrel similar to the German Pistole 08 but lacking a grip safety, stock lug and with a lanyard loop on the lower left side of the butt; around 10,000 were ordered. After the Second Balkan War many of the 7,65mm Lugers were re-barreled to 9mm
1075:
occupation police forces. Assembly commenced under French control from June 1945 until mid-1946. In the second half of 1946, tooling and some Mauser personnel moved from
Oberndorf to Châtellerault in France, the location of MAC (Manufacture d'Armes de Châtellerault) to continue assembly from existing parts stocks. About 4,000 Luger 'parts' pistols, including a few LP 08 models, are thought to have been assembled for French forces, a sufficient number to justify the production of new-manufacture Luger magazines in France for several years. Surviving examples of Lugers assembled under French supervision are sometimes found with a distinct, gray
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caliber, although a number of pistols were also re-barrelled to 9mm
Parabellum (9×19mm). The new component parts were stamped with serial numbers to match the frame to ensure that all the fitted parts stayed together. Many thousands of these pistols were thought to have been assembled and sold between 1919 and 1923. Some of these pistols were fitted with new barrels of different lengths by the importer upon customer request. Many so-called 1919 and 1920 Commercial Lugers were imported to the United States by such firms as Abercrombie & Fitch, Pacific Arms Co., and A.F. Stoeger Inc. The latter importer sought and registered the name
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1908:: Around 1901, a commission tested various semiautomatic pistols, the 7.65 model 1900 Luger was considered superior. No immediate decision was taken and in 1907 another commission decided on the Luger. That same year 50 Model 1906 commercial pistols were bought for an expedition into Cuamato territory in Angola. In 1908, between 3.500 to 5.000 model 1906 pistols in 7.65 were delivered. In 1910 the navy bought 650 Lugers in 9mm. In 1935 564 Lugers in 7.65 were bought for the National Republican Guard. In 1942 4.500 P08 Lugers were purchased
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3371:, Vol. 27 No. 1 (March 1901), p. 436: "The Board...has recommended that $ 15,000 be appropriated for the purchase of $ 1,000 of the Luger automatic pistols, which recently made such a wonderful record in the tests at Springfield Armory. The sum allotted—for the recommendation of the Board was instantly approved by the Secretary of War—is sufficient to furnish five of these pistols for each Troop of Cavalry in the service..."
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1968:
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1927:
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1169:-Luger' by U.S. authorities, Tauscher consistently referred to the pistol in his marketing and advertising materials as the 'Luger', after its inventor. Model 1900 pistols shipped to the U.S. were typically stamped with an American Eagle atop the barrel extensions. 'American Eagle' 7.65 Model 1900 pistols were used by a variety of buyers, including American lawmen such as Stringer Fenton, outlaws, and Texas Rangers.
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held down. When the trigger was released, the sear would rise and catch the breech block. This system was tested by the Swiss Army during World War I. Georg Luger himself apparently demonstrated a similar Luger machine-pistol around the same time, which inspired the German Army to introduce a submachine gun into service. The Senn machine-pistol was, however, not successful and it was never adopted by any military.
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1862:: Captured P08 Lugers were carried unofficially by some servicemen during WWI and WWII. At the end of WWI many captured Lugers were brought to New Zealand and were surrendered under amnesty following the 1920 Arms Act which outlawed the civilian possession of 'semi‐automatic pistols'. In 1942 the surrendered P08s held in Government stores were issued to RNZAF officers in the Aerodrome Defence Squadrons.
2112:
2076:
1244:(P04). The navy model had a 150 mm (5.9 in) barrel and a two-position – 100 meters (110 yd) or 200 meters (220 yd) – rear sight. This version was also referred to as the "Marine Modell 1904" or, more colloquially in the US as the "navy Luger". The Pistole 04 was later updated with a coil mainspring to Model 1906 pattern as Luger continued to refine and improve his design.
1321:
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1479:: The 7.65 model 1900 Luger was adopted in 1906 after navy trials, but purchases failed to materialize due to problems in the economy. In 1908 the improved 1906 model in 7.65 was ordered by the army. The Lugers were delivered to Brazil in 1910 and issued primarily to military officers; following a 1919 law a number of those were lent to police forces.
1139:(.30 Luger) caliber and issued the pistol on a limited basis to officers, non-commissioned officers and mounted troops, including Germany, Switzerland, and the United States. The Model 1900 or Pistole Modell 1900 was issued to German officers and likely first saw combat in China during intervention by German troops in the aftermath of the
1607:
during the civil war; including 100 artillery lugers. 7.65 pistols with 95mm and 98mm barrels were ordered from DWM and designated m/23 pistol; 2,000 were delivered in 1922 and a further 2,000 in 1923, by 1929 the army had 8,000 m/23 pistols. During the Winter War those pistols were converted to use
960:
Luger pistols were manufactured in
Germany and Switzerland to very close tolerances and exacting standards using the highest quality materials of the day, and original pistols were known for having a long service life. The design requires hand fitting of certain parts for proper operation. Assembling
599:
The Luger was officially adopted by the Swiss military in 1900, the
Imperial German Navy in 1906 and the German Army in 1908. The Luger was the standard service pistol of Switzerland, Portugal, the Netherlands, Brazil, Bolivia, and Bulgaria. It was widely used in other countries as a military service
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In 1916, Heinrich Senn of Bern designed and patented a modification of the standard Swiss Luger pistol to fire in single shots or in full-automatic. This was achieved through the implementation of a sloped trigger sear which allowed the breech block to pass over it uninterrupted when the trigger was
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In the early 1920s, carbine production was restarted. Under a small contract, LP 08 or
Artillery P08s were assembled in the 1930s to fill an order from the Shah of Iran for his artillery troops, with some of these weapons ending up with Thai police forces. Existing LP 08 pistols that had remained in
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Although Mauser P08 production terminated in 1943, the P08 re-appeared in postwar form because of the continuing demand for handguns for military and police requirements. In 1945, Mauser restarted Luger production under the control of the French occupation authority to supply the French military and
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took over the manufacture of P.08 from DWM. Additional P08s were produced by Simson and later
Krieghoff. Many P04 and P08 pistols would continue in service with German army and navy personnel throughout World War II. Towards the end of 1937 (beginning with 't' & 'u' block pistols), Mauser phased
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and "Germany". These pistols were exported to the United States in both 7.65 Parabellum (.30 Luger) and 9mm calibers, with barrel lengths from 75 mm to 600 mm. These imported
Parabellums were also the first pistols to bear the name "Luger", roll stamped on the right side of the receiver.
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observed that the Luger design had been unfairly criticized by gun writers over the years as unreliable, partly due to poor experiences with Lugers constructed from salvaged parts. Keith noted that the Luger was a "natural pointer", one of the most accurate of all autoloading pistols—particularly at
785:
The fate of the .45 Luger, serial number 1 is unknown, as it was not returned and is believed to have been destroyed during testing. The .45 Luger prototype serial number 2, believed to have been a back-up to Serial Number 1, survived the 1907 trials and is in private ownership. Its rarity gives its
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or LP 08, known as the "Artillery Luger", was authorised by the Kaiser on 2 July 1913. This P08 variation was equipped with a 200 mm (7.9 in) barrel, an 8-position tangent rear sight (calibrated to 800 meters (870 yd)) and a board-type shoulder stock with an attached leather holster.
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Parabellum pistols with 4.75-inch barrels, marked with what appear to be standard U.S. ordnance bomb proofs, but are not, and "American Eagle" stamps over the chambers, and issued them to each troop of mounted cavalry of the U.S. Army for field testing, with the remainder to the light artillery and
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Until 1930, DWM continued to export both P08 and commercial
Parabellum pistols to nations in Europe and to overseas markets, including the United States and the Far East. Although never officially adopted by Nationalist forces, all variants of the Parabellum or Luger pistol were highly sought after
865:
in 1938, which offered similar performance to the Luger, but took almost half the time to produce. Moving the production lines to the P38 once World War II started took longer than expected, leading to the P08 remaining in production until
September 1942, and pre-existing copies remained in service
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had provided Luger with 5,000 rounds of .45 ammunition for experimentation and to serve as a guide for chambering measurements. Finding numerous defects in this prototype ammunition (U.S. authorities later were forced to produce new ammunition for the 1907 trials), Luger had DWM pull the bullets of
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The Swiss
Parabellum 06/29 continued in production until 1946. In 1969, after purchasing the Swiss 06/29 tooling, Mauser Werke in Oberndorf restarted Parabellum production, which ceased in 1986 when the last commemorative model was produced. While new Mauser Luger production ended at this time,
1042:
Captured Lugers were much prized by Allied soldiers during both of the world wars as war trophies. However, during World War II, German soldiers were known to sometimes use a discarded Luger pistol to lure unsuspecting trophy hunters, rigging it to detonate land mines or hidden booby traps when
986:
From 1919 onwards, DWM rebuilt P08 frames with new parts or existing parts (including barrels) into complete pistols for sale to the civilian and export markets. These sales helped restore DWM to solvency after the Armistice. Most of these commercial pistols were in 7.65 Parabellum (.30 Luger)
917:
This mechanism works well for higher-pressure cartridges, but cartridges loaded to a lower pressure can cause the pistol to malfunction because they do not generate enough recoil to work the action fully. This results in the breech block either not clearing the top cartridge of the magazine or
695:
In 1898, Germany adopted a total of 145 C96 pistols, but found that it jammed too often to be effective. In 1901, testing of the Luger commenced, alongside an improved version of the C96, in which the Luger was found to be both lighter and more reliable. Following a change in caliber from
1337:. While initially intended for use by German artillery units who could not be encumbered by the long and heavy K.98 rifle, the LP 08 was also used by Aviation units (prior to equipping aircraft with machine guns) as well as the infantry, primarily on the Western front during World War I.
1212:
In 1902, DWM introduced a slightly improved version of the Model 1900 Parabellum as the Model 1902. The Model 1902, with its shortened 4-inch barrel, was the first Parabellum pistol to be offered in 9×19mm Parabellum caliber, along with a change from four-groove to six-groove rifling.
1164:
Commercial models of the Model 1900 were exported in quantity as well. In the U.S., Model 1900 pistols in 7.65 Parabellum caliber (aka .30 Luger in the U.S.) were first imported by Georg Luger, then by a DWM sales agent, Hans Tauscher, until World War I. Referred to at the time as the
924:
were found to be effective in trench warfare during World War I, and experiments were conducted to convert various types of pistols to fully automatic machine pistols, including the P08. The Luger proved to have an excessive rate of fire in full-automatic mode, however, as did the
1962:: Used by the Red Army during the civil war; in September 1929, an agreement was signed under which about 300 pistols were delivered from the Weimar Republic, their assembly was carried out at the Sestroretsk arms factory. stored captured P08s but never used in combat
842:, although due to a lack of pre-war production, the LP08 was much less commonly used than the P08. The main user of the LP08 was the Army, who used its drum magazine to deliver a high rate of fire at a close range, a concept which would lead to the development of the
918:
becoming jammed open on the cartridge's base. This malfunction with under-powered cartridges does occur with Browning-type and other pistol designs as well, but the Luger is sensitive to cartridges other than the brass-cased ammunition that it was designed to use.
2366:
1345:) units frequently employed the Artillery Luger equipped with a new large magazine, the 32-round Trommelmagazin or 'snail' magazine. Production of the LP 08 ended in 1918 with the end of the war. By that time, German troops had begun using the newly developed
1043:
disturbed. Word also spread of accidental discharges and deaths of Allied troops by users unfamiliar with the P08 and its safety mechanisms, as well as stories circulating that American soldiers were being executed if captured in possession of German weapons.
1333:
In the event of close combat, the pistol was intended to be used as a carbine with the shoulder stock attached to a lug mounted on the heel of the pistol frame. When set for long range use the rear sight element visibly moves to the left to compensate for
1106:, claimed that "From its adoption, the Luger was synonymous with the German military through the end of World War II" and "Ask any World War II vet of the what the most prized war souvenir was and the answer will invariably come back, 'a Luger'." Colonel
1185:. This model uses a 120 mm (4.7 in) barrel and incorporates a grip safety and leaf-type mainspring. A later Swiss military contract with DWM resulted in the latter supplying improved Model 1900/06 pattern pistols designated the Model 1906 or
683:. 20 examples of the Borchardt-Luger were sent to Switzerland in 1899, and after a revision to reduce its weight, was adopted the following year as the Ordonnanzpistole 1900. The Luger remained in Swiss service until 1949, when it was replaced by the
1160:
by Springfield Armory in 1904. Other nations either tested the Model 1900 or purchased small numbers for limited field service, including Austria, Brazil, Bulgaria, Canada, Chile, the Netherlands, Luxembourg, Russia, Norway, Sweden, and Portugal.
818:
in 1905-1907. Therein, it was somewhat poorly received, as it was thought to be too heavy to be used quickly, in particular because the grip safety had to be held tightly, reducing accuracy, leading to the removal of the safety in the P08 model.
772:
In 1906 and 1907, the U.S. Army held trials for a large-caliber semi-automatic pistol. At least two, and possibly three, Parabellum Model 1902/1906 pattern pistols were brought to the U.S. by Georg Luger for the 1907 trials, each chambered in
3699:"Czechoslovak Weapons of World War II: part 1: Czechoslovakia was well-armed and fortified before World War II, but appeasers in Britain and France pulled the rug out, making "Munich" a synonym for betrayal. - Free Online Library"
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versions of the LP 08 were also produced commercially, with yet longer barrels. The firm Armeria Belga of Santiago (Chile) also manufactured a detachable stock, the Benke Thiemann stock, that could fold out from the grip section.
1079:
finish. A few early French control pistols bear a five-pointed star proof mark known to have been used by French Occupation authorities. Later pistols assembled in France often carry a French arsenal/manufacturer name, such as
720:
delayed their adoption, as Mauser requested time to develop a new pistol of their own, which was finished in 1907. However, the new pistol was still found to be less desirable than the Luger, and on 22 August 1908,
1023:
out the rust blue process and "straw finishing" small parts and levers on the P08, choosing to salt blue all parts of the weapon at one time. In 1941, some of these pistols were fitted with inexpensive black
733:
In 1901, DWM sent two Lugers to the United States, who were also interested in a semi-automatic pistol. After doing well in testing, a total of 1,000 pistols and 200,000 rounds were purchased for use by the
1349:
submachine gun in place of the LP 08 for their stormtrooper assault companies. However, by this time enough LP 08 barrels had been manufactured and stockpiled to fill LP 08 export orders into the 1930s.
1264:). This version of the Parabellum replaced the old flat laminated main spring with a more reliable coil design. As all models of the Luger built after 1906 have the coil mainspring, they are known as
1361:
storage were re-issued in World War II with new-production board stocks for some German units such as artillerymen and Waffen-SS units, and these continued in use until the end of the war in 1945.
1156:
Parabellum pistols with 4-inch barrels, again in 7.65mm Parabellum, for further testing and evaluation. This was followed by a third test of 50 so-called "cartridge counter" Parabellum pistols in
4048:
1015:, a review of Chinese Nationalist small arms reported that "Among officers, bodyguards, and police, the German Parabellum (Luger) 9-mm automatic pistol was the weapon of choice...".
826:, not all units of the German Army had been equipped with the Luger, leading to an acceleration in production. Alongside the P08, Germany also developed the LP08, a version with a
4587:
1200:
with improved sights, trigger and a stronger toggle link. Manufactured entirely at Waffenfabrik Bern, the 06/29 pistol served the Swiss Army until well after the adoption of the
802:
as of 1994. At least two .45 caliber Luger pistols were manufactured later for possible commercial or military sales; one is exhibited at the R. W. Norton Art Gallery, in
1027:
grip panels to cut production time and expense. Years after the war, these pistols would be given the name "Black Widow" by a postwar US arms dealer as a marketing ploy.
1377:
of the pistol. A single rifle, serial number 4, exists in a private collection. The Luger rifle was protected under British patent No. 4126 of 1906. It was chambered in
4650:
1622:: The French occupied and operated the Mauser factory 1945–46, then seized remaining Mauser parts stocks to assemble approximately 4,000 Luger pistols for French forces
965:
from working, making the pistol inoperable. The Luger barrel, which was rigidly fixed to the barrel extension and carried the front sight, provided excellent accuracy.
1309:
also adopted the DWM Luger in 9×19mm Parabellum as an officer's sidearm; 500 were bought in 1913. They bore the legend "Ejercito Boliviano" stamped on the chamber.
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2715:
1114:. Vietnamese gunsmiths even copied the basic Luger design, producing a few crude "Luger" pistols with which to arm Viet Cong and other irregular forces.
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long ranges—and reminded critics that the Luger was the choice of more nations as their military sidearm than any other contemporary pistol or revolver.
675:, provided the Borchardt-Luger design, which during Swiss military trials, was found to be more accurate and reliable than competing designs such as the
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Pistols were also assembled under the direction of Soviet (and later, East German) authorities to arm military and MP units, as well as the
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1726:
1003:
That same year, DWM also signed contracts to supply small numbers of P08 pistols to the armed forces of Finland (8,000 pistols, designated
6349:
2140:
854:, which restricted the size of their army – the treaty specified that the German Army could only have 50,000 pistols, and prohibited
5209:
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6334:
601:
4824:
806:, Louisiana. The other was sold in 2010 and remains in a private collection. A single .45 Luger carbine is also known to exist.
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KNIL-wapens in Indonesische musea (KNIL weapons in Indonesian museums), D.W. Staat, SAM Wapenmagazine 85, p.51 (In Dutch)
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Soviet forces captured tens of thousands of Lugers but they were never issued to their own troops, only kept in storage.
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Georg Luger introduced a new version of the Parabellum pistol in 1906, which would become known as the Model 1906 or
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As the Luger was expensive to produce, Germany started to look for a replacement as early as 1927, settling on the
843:
174:
17:
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The Luger is well known for its wide use by Germany during World War I and World War II, along with the interwar
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by both Chinese Nationalist officers and irregular guerrilla forces. In 1924, just before the outbreak of the
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In 1906, the United States evaluated several domestic and foreign-made semi-automatic pistols, including the
3554:
The Big Book of Gun Trivia: Everything You Want to Know, Don't Want to Know, and Don't Know You Need to Know
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pistol and by police forces. In the German Army service, it was adopted in a slightly modified form as the '
5044:
2030:
757:. This was in response to combat reports which stated that the .38 caliber revolvers used in the 1899–1902
219:
214:
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1084:(Manufrance). Surviving French Control Lugers were retained in French storage depots of the paramilitary
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31:
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1848:. Other contracts were completed for the Dutch Navy commencing in 1923, and the Dutch Air Force in 1928
1324:'Artillery Luger' Lange Pistole 08 with a 32-round Trommelmagazin 08 drum magazine and removable stock.
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722:
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1935:: 9mm Lugers were authorized as a sidearm in 1907; small amounts were privately purchased by officers.
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4625:"Yugoslav Part II: World War II small arms: an assortment of small arms from friends and foe alike"
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Annual Report of the Chief of Ordnance, United States, Army Ordnance Dept., 28 October 1902, p. 258
667:, the Swiss military began to look for a semi-automatic pistol to replace their issued pistol, the
239:
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2319:
1521::The Luger was in use with the Czechoslovak military after the declaration of independence in 1919
1181:
adopted the Model 1900 on April 4, 1901, in 7.65×21mm caliber as its standard sidearm, designated
725:
signed an order for 50,000 Lugers for the German Army, with orders to produce a total of 170,000.
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Mauser Parabellum (INTERARMS) Certification Service from the Original Mauser Production Ledgers.
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The Borchardt & Luger Automatic Pistols: A Technical History for Collectors from C93 to P.08
3985:
Lugers, Lugers and Lugers. Detailed description of the most recent import of German P08 pistols.
2977:, p. 25: In 1922 DWM became part of a holding company, Berlin-Karlsruher Industrie-Werke (BKIW).
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1189:. Commencing in 1918, these Model 1906 Parabellum pistols were manufactured and assembled at
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of 1900. On April 16, 1901, following a successful preliminary test of the Model 1900 at the
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300:
76:
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3749:"BULGARIAN SMALL ARMS OF WORLD WAR II, PART I: SOME OLD AND SOME NEW. - Free Online Library"
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6234:
6180:
6175:
6170:
6097:
5684:
5664:
5583:
5578:
5133:
4998:
4960:
2345:
1370:
1287:
1233:
1226:
1085:
851:
717:
705:
465:
6076:
5296:
4348:"Russian/Soviet: military handguns part 1 from Lefaucheux to Luger. - Free Online Library"
3030:
2488:
1299:
701:
612:
478:
8:
5900:
5549:
5113:
4879:
2636:
1448:: Armed forces used Lugers after 1945, supplied from the French-controlled Mauser factory
1196:
In 1929, Swiss authorities adopted an improved version of the Modell 1900 designated the
933:
815:
264:
144:
120:
38:
6066:
6046:
5146:
835:
6298:
6288:
6283:
6242:
5489:
5316:
5107:
5100:
5049:
4394:
4191:
2128:
1887:
1144:
995:
290:
280:
5544:
4993:
4406:
3725:
Fighting Men of World War II, Volume I: Axis Forces — Uniforms, Equipment, and Weapons
906:
The Luger has a toggle-lock action that uses a jointed arm to lock, as opposed to the
738:, and several other forts. The Luger was unpopular, with most troops preferring their
567:. The Luger was produced in several models and by several nations from 1898 to 1949.
6005:
5887:
5790:
5494:
5484:
5449:
4988:
4945:
4790:
Luger Book: The Encyclopedia of the Borchardt and Borchardt-Luger Handguns, 1885–1985
4733:
4716:
4706:
4685:
4561:
4485:
4321:
4230:
4201:
4111:
4087:
4025:
3963:
3891:
3821:
3810:
3790:
3780:
3728:
3681:
3606:
3579:
3576:
Luger Book: The Encyclopedia of the Borchardt and Borchardt-Luger Handguns, 1885–1985
3469:
3433:
3352:
3299:
3237:
3174:
3119:
3058:
3034:
3004:
2932:
2890:
2468:
1190:
1054:
1012:
778:
488:
275:
229:
209:
189:
184:
6061:
5754:
5654:
5649:
1600:
6278:
6257:
5704:
5699:
5621:
5616:
5603:
5534:
5529:
5355:
5221:
5161:
5081:
5075:
5068:
4935:
4922:
4402:
4313:
2219:, Gun Digest, 1957 ed., Chicago, Illinois: Edward Keogh Co. Inc. (1956) pp. 164–165
1604:
1378:
966:
827:
792:
786:
value of around US$ 1 million at the time the "Million Dollar Guns" episode of the
676:
351:
4280:":: Revista Militar ::-Revistas - As Indústrias Militares e As Armas de Fogo"
5593:
5570:
5340:
4851:
4700:
3600:
3287:
3023:
2068:
1761:
1659:
1578:
1140:
1107:
969:
praised the Luger's 145° (55° for Americans) grip angle and duplicated it in his
855:
623:
508:
194:
134:
6162:
5782:
5724:
5689:
5588:
5365:
5141:
5122:
5008:
4955:
4861:
4305:
2720:
2026:
1518:
1374:
1237:
1201:
1166:
1110:
mentioned in his autobiography that it was still a sought-after sidearm in the
1099:
pistols continued to be assembled and sold from parts on hand until the 1990s.
970:
962:
921:
798:
762:
660:
575:
159:
4866:
4513:
4372:
4317:
3983:
3911:
3292:
3210:
2863:
2700:
2465:
The Encyclopedia of Nineteenth-Century Land Warfare: An Illustrated World View
2315:
874:, mostly from ex-Nazi stocks, but they produced a small number up until 1953.
30:
This article is about the Luger pistol. For other meanings of parabellum, see
6318:
6262:
6229:
6224:
5997:
5744:
5626:
5519:
5321:
4910:
4720:
4565:
3933:
3794:
3776:
Armies of the Balkan Wars 1912-13 : the priming charge for the Great War
2162:
2043:
1646:
1306:
1062:
944:
towards the end of the war, was originally designed for the Artillery Luger.
930:
831:
739:
254:
86:
5156:
4395:"US Army, Report, Commanders' Conference, October 2, 1952, Top Secret, NARA"
961:
the gun using a sideplate from another pistol, for example, may prevent the
6200:
6129:
5739:
5714:
5631:
5611:
5524:
5504:
5269:
5264:
5259:
5213:
5091:
5059:
4950:
4431:
4145:
2157:
1959:
1689:
1685:
1672:
1550:
1092:
907:
871:
867:
839:
628:
498:
295:
259:
234:
57:
6086:
3774:
2438:
1268:. Older Parabellum pistols in German service were usually upgraded to the
1152:
officers at West Point. In 1902, U.S. Army officials purchased another 50
814:
The first known instance of the Luger being used in combat was during the
6215:
5514:
5418:
5239:
5026:
4983:
4914:
3648:"Military and police handgun cartridges of Brazil. - Free Online Library"
1986:
1859:
1841:
1221:
1111:
1076:
1036:
974:
952:
862:
823:
616:
571:
366:
319:
269:
169:
164:
154:
3527:
2342:
International Historical Statistics, Africa, Asia and Oceania 1750-1993
513:
350–400 m/s (1,100–1,300 ft/s) (9mm, 100 mm short barrel)
6247:
6185:
6143:
6081:
6013:
5254:
5244:
5229:
5166:
4940:
2684:
U.S. Army Annual Report for the Fiscal Year ending June 30, 1907 (1907)
2152:
1814:
1178:
1067:
926:
894:
Cutaway drawing of the Luger pistol from Georg Luger's 1908 9mm patent.
803:
746:
680:
640:
437:
387:
5039:
4830:
A Luger-related searchable database with hundreds of photos and values
2673:, (Feb 2001) www.nramuseum.com/media/940450/1907%20pistol%20trials.pdf
882:
5961:
5912:
5848:
5559:
5454:
5350:
5306:
5301:
5249:
5207:
4978:
2356:
London : Macmillan ; New York : Stockton, 1998. After
2318:," CQE Working Papers 1510, Center for Quantitative Economics (CQE),
2116:
1801:
1722:
1581:: Used Luger pistols in a semi-official capacity taken from disarmed
1463:
1427:
1369:
The Luger rifle was an attempt by Georg Luger to make a full-powered
224:
199:
63:
2352:
London : Macmillan ; New York : Stockton, 1998, and
1725:: Almost 14,000 Dutch KNIL M.11 Lugers were in Indonesia before the
1157:
67:
P08 ordnance model (Collection Paul Regnier, Lausanne, Switzerland)
5554:
5469:
5403:
2747:
2013:
1905:
1734:
1024:
838:
during the early days of the war, before planes were equipped with
684:
1751:: Supplied to forces collaborating with Germany in northern Italy.
1696:
agents. A small number were sold abroad to Ethiopia in the 1980s.
1282:
In 1908, the German Army adopted the DWM Parabellum pistol as the
898:
6195:
6190:
6051:
5985:
5806:
5641:
5398:
5283:
5151:
3392:
1900 Luger U.S. Test Trials, by Michael Reese II, 1976, pages 1,7
1919:
1709:
1633:
1596:
1459:
1445:
1409:
1353:
774:
3349:
History In Three Keys: The Boxers As Event, Experience, and Myth
3095:, Part I and II, Gun Facts Magazine (July 1969) pp. 10-15, 35-37
1127:
890:
6303:
5949:
5837:
5826:
5818:
5408:
5345:
3602:
The Chaco War 1932-35: South America's greatest modern conflict
2000:
1973:
1932:
1873:
1828:
1774:
1619:
1490:
1476:
1204:
in 1949, and remained in limited service until the late 1960s.
1019:
754:
361:
346:
4756:
by Joachim Gortz and Dr. Geoffrey Sturgess (Simpson Ltd, 2012)
3455:, Edmond Life & Leisure 29 Dec 2016, retrieved 14 Dec 2017
2263:
1298:) had a 100 mm (3.9 in) barrel and was chambered in
6158:
5872:
5798:
5479:
5474:
5464:
5459:
5444:
5439:
5429:
5393:
5388:
5378:
5373:
5291:
5279:
5034:
5016:
4970:
4798:
by Mauro Baudino and Gerben van Vlimmeren (Simpson Ltd, 2010)
4786:
by Edward B. Tinker and Graham K. Johnson (Simpson Ltd, 2007)
4255:"Classic Handguns of the 20th Century: The P.08 German Luger"
1946:
1788:
1693:
1504:
1346:
1135:
A number of countries purchased the Model 1900 Parabellum in
937:
911:
847:
6127:
4808:
3419:, Shooting Times, 4 October 2010, retrieved 12 December 2017
2360:, German inflation numbers based on data available from the
1989:: The Swiss Army was the first to adopt the Luger. 1900–1950
769:, the military required a handgun in .45 (11.25mm) caliber.
5924:
5383:
4229:] (in Portuguese). Lisbon: Prefácio. pp. 100–103.
2354:
International Historical Statistics, The Americas 1750-1993
2333:
1035:
The P08 was technically replaced in service in 1938 by the
373:
4909:
4223:
Armamento do Exército Português, Vol.I – Armamento Ligeiro
4200:] (in Norwegian). Oslo: Fabritius. 1990. p. 563.
3934:"FINNISH ARMY 1918 - 1945: REVOLVERS & PISTOLS PART 1"
2336:, Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development,
1844:: Dutch arms factories made Lugers in 1912 for use by the
910:
actions of many other semi-automatic pistols, such as the
742:
revolvers, resulting in the Luger being recalled in 1905.
2774:
2772:
2401:, Annapolis, Maryland, Vol. 27, No. 1 (March 1901) p. 436
1320:
1082:
Manufacture Française d'Armes & Cycles de St. Etienne
4554:"Martin McGuinness: I'm not bothered by gun photograph"
4312:, DE GRUYTER SAUR, pp. 119–122, 31 December 2000,
4227:
Armament of the Portuguese Army, Vol.I – Light Armament
4084:
Italian small arms of the first & second world wars
3055:
From War to Nationalism: China's Turning Point, 1924–25
2388:. United States War Department. 25 May 1943. p. 5.
3484:
3482:
3430:
Cowboys and Gangsters: Stories of an Untamed Southwest
3192:
3190:
2889:(7th ed.). Iola, Wisconsin: Krause Publications.
2846:
2844:
2842:
2840:
2838:
2789:
2787:
2769:
2759:
2757:
2553:
2551:
2538:
2536:
2523:
2521:
521:
50 m (55 yd) (9mm, 100 mm short barrel)
2350:
International Historical Statistics, Europe 1750-1993
2283:
2281:
2279:
1312:
4446:
3598:
998:
began importing commercial pistols from DWM stamped
3479:
3187:
2835:
2823:
2811:
2799:
2784:
2754:
2611:
2599:
2587:
2575:
2563:
2548:
2533:
2518:
2506:
2418:
The Illustrated Encyclopedia of Weapons and Warfare
902:
Toggle-lock action with the knee joint bent upwards
588:(DWM). The first production model was known as the
580:
Parabellum Automatic Pistol, Borchardt-Luger System
4702:World War II Axis Booby Traps and Sabotage Tactics
4588:"The American Connection: Running Guns to the IRA"
4310:International Directory of Libraries for the Blind
3468:, Santa Barbara, California: ABC-CLIO Publishing,
3291:
2489:"7.65 X 22: DWM; 7.65 mm Parabellum & DWM 471"
2420:. Vol. 16. London, UK: Phoebus. p. 1778.
2276:
2231:
2229:
2227:
2225:
1777:: Purchased less than 1,000 between 1936 and 1939.
2316:Consumer prices and wages in Germany, 1500 - 1850
2293:
6316:
5917:
5893:
5880:
5865:
5853:
4862:YouTube animation showing mechanism of Luger P08
4482:Marighella: o guerrilheiro que incendiou o mundo
4248:
4246:
4049:"Historical Breechloading Smallarms Association"
3021:Jowett, Philip; Snodgrass, Brent (5 July 2006).
2399:Proceedings of the United States Naval Institute
1729:. As such, the Luger was widely used during the
1058:Post-war, stainless steel Luger, 9mm Parabellum.
3466:Pistols: An Illustrated History of Their Impact
3020:
2264:Douglas de Souza Aguiar Junior (25 June 2017).
2222:
994:In 1923, A.F. Stoeger Inc., the predecessor to
850:. After the end of the war, Germany signed the
615:. The Model 08 was eventually succeeded by the
4835:Maßtafeln zur Pistole 08 und langen Pistole 08
4053:Historical Breechloading Smallarms Association
3960:The Illustrated Directory of 20th Century Guns
3294:About Face: The Odyssey of an American Warrior
671:. Georg Luger, working for the German company
6113:
5193:
4895:
4243:
3816:. Oxford, UK: Osprey Publishing Ltd. p.
3578:. London, UK: Arms & Armour. p. 66.
3280:
3107:
3105:
3103:
3101:
2411:
2409:
2407:
2238:"A pistola Parabellum do contrato brasileiro"
1147:, the U.S. Board of Ordnance purchased 1,000
1122:
4606:"Congress Congressmen Capitol Shooting 1954"
4007:"Urgent Fury 1983: WWII weapons encountered"
3881:
3879:
3877:
2361:
1737:is known to have personally carried an M.11.
1727:Japanese occupation of the Dutch East Indies
1275:
1247:
651:; "If you wish for peace, prepare for war."
6325:7.65×21mm Parabellum semi-automatic pistols
5990:
4754:The Borchardt & Luger Automatic Pistols
4681:The Encyclopedia of Weapons of World War II
4467:U.S. Military Automatic Pistols 1920 - 1945
4374:Small Arms of WWI Primer 185: Foreign 1911s
4221:Telo, António José; Álvares, Mário (2004).
4220:
4198:The Army of the Second World War: 1945–1990
4030:: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (
3404:, Tulsa Daily World, 15 October 1911, p. 18
3234:The Encyclopedia of Weapons of World War II
3115:The Encyclopedia of Weapons of World War II
2929:The Encyclopedia of Weapons of World War II
2916:
2305:
1599:: Small numbers of P08 Lugers acquired by
644:
574:. It was meant to be an improvement of the
6120:
6106:
5200:
5186:
4902:
4888:
4542:(in French). No. 220. pp. 28–30.
4127:
3951:
3569:
3567:
3565:
3563:
3528:"Maschinenpistole Senn (Luger conversion)"
3098:
2716:"Would you Shoot the Million Dollar Luger"
2416:Fitzsimons, Bernard, ed. (1977). "Luger".
2415:
2404:
1876:: In use from 1945 and phased out in 1987.
1462:: delivered from 1912 and used during the
1416:, bought from Yugoslavia or Czechoslovakia
37:"P08" redirects here. For other uses, see
6360:Weapons and ammunition introduced in 1900
5966:
5954:
4479:
3874:
3599:Alejandro de Quesada (20 November 2011).
3286:
3208:
2884:
2376:
2266:"O Museu de Polícia Militar de São Paulo"
2141:Zimbabwe African National Liberation Army
1507:: 1900 commercial model bought for trials
1493:: 1900 commercial model bought for trials
830:and longer barrel that could also accept
690:
452:200 mm (7.9 in) (Lange Pistole 1908)
6370:World War II infantry weapons of Germany
6026:
5942:
5930:
5905:
5811:
4780:by Charles Kenyon (Hand Gun Press, 1990)
4622:
4528:
4193:Hæren etter Annen verdenskrig: 1945–1990
3321:
3029:. Elite 141. Osprey Publishing. p.
2740:"Investment Firearm – .45 Luger Carbine"
2433:
2431:
2429:
2427:
2348: ; New York : Stockton, 1998,
1817::1900 commercial model bought for trials
1384:
1319:
1220:
1126:
1061:
1053:
951:
897:
889:
881:
777:caliber. Prior to his arrival, the U.S.
6375:World War II infantry weapons of Brazil
4698:
4484:. São Paulo, SP: Companhia das Letras.
4464:
4004:
3870:. Profile Publications Ltd. p. 57.
3865:
3560:
3551:
3014:
2956:
2954:
2952:
2950:
2948:
2887:Military Small Arms of the 20th Century
2697:"Tales of the Gun: Million Dollar Guns"
2462:
2338:Economic Outlook. Historical Statistics
14:
6317:
4792:by J. Walter (Arms & Armour, 1991)
4677:
4252:
4081:
3957:
3807:
3772:
3722:
3716:
3573:
3379:
3377:
3231:
3168:
3164:
3162:
3160:
3111:
3087:
3085:
3083:
3081:
3079:
3077:
3075:
3073:
3071:
2995:
2993:
2991:
2989:
2987:
2985:
2983:
2922:
2211:
2209:
2207:
673:Deutsche Waffen- und Munitionsfabriken
585:Deutsche Waffen- und Munitionsfabriken
6330:9mm Parabellum semi-automatic pistols
6101:
5181:
4883:
4809:Artillery Luger and Mauser Parabellum
4774:by Jan C. Still (Still's Books, 1993)
4768:by Jan C. Still (Still's Books, 1988)
4762:by Jan C. Still (Still's Books, 1994)
4727:
4585:
4534:
4452:
4253:Arnold, David W. (11 November 2010).
4043:
4041:
3885:
3672:
3670:
3668:
3592:
3488:
3317:
3315:
3260:
3256:
3254:
3196:
2850:
2829:
2817:
2805:
2793:
2778:
2763:
2724:. InterMedia Outdoors. Archived from
2713:
2665:
2663:
2661:
2659:
2657:
2634:
2630:
2628:
2626:
2617:
2605:
2593:
2581:
2569:
2557:
2542:
2527:
2512:
2424:
2299:
2287:
2205:
2203:
2201:
2199:
2197:
2195:
2193:
2191:
2189:
2187:
2168:Table of handgun and rifle cartridges
2050:
1232:The Luger pistol was accepted by the
858:and pistols with stocks altogether.
643:address, comes from the Latin phrase
563:, is a toggle-locked recoil-operated
341:Deutsche Waffen und Munitionsfabriken
5978:
4684:. Sterling Publishing Company, Inc.
4086:. Schiffer Publishing. p. 163.
3556:. Bloomsbury Publishing. p. 32.
3324:"Viet Cong Handmade Luger Lookalike"
3261:Huard, Paul Richard (6 March 2015).
2945:
2878:
2703:on 1 April 2019 – via YouTube.
1049:
809:
578:, and was initially produced as the
6365:World War I German infantry weapons
6340:19th-century semi-automatic pistols
4641:
4428:""ПАРАБЕЛЛУМ" Легендарный пистолет"
3374:
3157:
3068:
2980:
710:Selbstlade-Pistole Modell 1904, and
150:1907 Expedition Against the Cuamato
24:
4747:
4586:Blake, Andrew (4 September 1979).
4038:
3890:(2nd ed.). Gun Digest Books.
3665:
3545:
3312:
3298:. New York: Simon & Schuster.
3251:
3236:. New York: Orbis Publishing Ltd.
2654:
2623:
2467:. New York: W.W. Norton & Co.
2392:
2184:
981:
659:In 1897, after the success of the
25:
6386:
6350:Semi-automatic pistols of Germany
4825:Bulgarian Luger 08 on GunsTribune
4802:
4796:The Parabellum is Back! 1945–2000
4728:Grant, Neil (20 September 2018).
4705:. Oxford, UK: Osprey Publishing.
4656:from the original on 2 March 2013
4623:Scarlata, Paul (1 October 2017).
4535:Perez, Jean-Claude (March 1992).
4407:10.1163/9789004346673.wmdo-02_462
4158:
3605:. Osprey Publishing. p. 23.
3322:McCollum, Ian (27 January 2016).
3212:Mud Test: WW1 & WW2 P08 Luger
2931:. Orbis publishing. p. 258.
2865:Mud Test: WW1 & WW2 P08 Luger
2699:. History Channel. Archived from
2363:Deutsches Statistisches Bundesamt
2093:Provisional Irish Republican Army
1892:Palestine Liberation Organization
1104:The Standard Catalog of the Luger
877:
570:The design was first patented by
449:100 mm (3.9 in) (Pistole 08)
446:120 mm (4.7 in) (Pistole 00)
424:871 g (1 lb 15 oz)
4867:How does it work: Toggle Actions
4732:. Weapon 64. Osprey Publishing.
4635:
4616:
4598:
4579:
4546:
4506:"The Weapons: Semi-auto Pistols"
4498:
4473:
4458:
4420:
4387:
4365:
4175:"NZ Arms Register- Luger Pistol"
4132:. WorldInventory. Archived from
3727:. Stackpole Books. p. 369.
3452:The Last Of The Old Time Outlaws
3369:U.S. Naval Institute Proceedings
3173:. Greenhill Books. p. 127.
2913:, Stackpole Books (1948), p. 104
2635:Datig, Fred A. (20 April 2009).
2134:
2122:
2110:
2098:
2086:
2074:
2062:
2036:
2019:
2006:
1993:
1979:
1966:
1952:
1939:
1925:
1912:
1898:
1880:
1866:
1852:
1834:
1821:
1807:
1794:
1781:
1767:
1755:
1741:
1715:
1702:
1678:
1665:
1652:
1639:
1626:
1612:
1589:
1571:
1557:
1539:
1525:
1511:
1497:
1483:
1469:
1452:
1438:
1430:: Used captured examples in the
1420:
1402:
1286:(P08) Parabellum to replace the
1007:), the Netherlands, and Sweden.
973:. Handgun author and enthusiast
596:" for the Imperial German Navy.
582:by the German arms manufacturer
518:Effective firing range
56:
5680:Gross Panzergranate 46 & 61
4340:
4298:
4282:. 27 March 2012. Archived from
4272:
4214:
4184:
4167:
4152:
4130:"World Infantry Weapons: Libya"
4121:
4100:
4075:
4066:
3998:
3976:
3926:
3904:
3859:
3834:
3801:
3766:
3741:
3691:
3640:
3619:
3520:
3494:
3458:
3443:
3422:
3407:
3395:
3386:
3362:
3341:
3225:
3202:
3148:
3139:
3047:
2967:
2903:
2885:Hogg, Ian; Weeks, John (2000).
2856:
2732:
2707:
2689:
2676:
2637:"The Luger Pistol | Gun Digest"
2481:
2456:
1894:received P08s from East Germany
1030:
991:in 1929, in the United States.
956:Luger Model 1900 pistol carbine
704:, the Luger was adopted by the
639:, which also featured in DWM's
529:8-round detachable box magazine
357:Heinrich Krieghoff Waffenfabrik
6335:9mm Parabellum submachine guns
3812:Chinese Warlord Armies 1911–30
3402:Tells Of Taking Bandit M'Curdy
3057:, Cambridge University Press,
2257:
2244:
2105:Puerto Rican Nationalist Party
1731:Indonesian National Revolution
1688:: Used until the 1960s by the
1565:Democratic Republic of Georgia
1364:
1172:
736:Military Academy at West Point
728:
555:), commonly known as just the
405:
250:Indonesian National Revolution
13:
1:
6355:Weapons of the Ottoman Empire
4857:Luger Pistol M1906 Blueprints
4845:Luger Pistol M1904 Blueprints
4840:Luger Pistol M1900 Blueprints
4430:. 24 May 2007. Archived from
4108:The Standard Catalog of Luger
3678:The Standard Catalog of Luger
3351:, Columbia University Press,
3001:The Standard Catalog of Luger
2714:James, Garry (October 2010).
2252:Latin American Wars 1900–1941
2173:
1216:
1207:
1131:Swiss Pistol 06/29, 7.65×21mm
947:
866:until the end of the war. In
765:. Due to the findings in the
663:, as the first mass-produced
6128:Finnish infantry weapons of
3432:, Rowman & Littlefield,
2031:Special Operations Executive
1567:: Mainly issued to officers.
1000:A.F.Stoeger Inc. – New York.
626:and the postwar East German
220:Constitutionalist Revolution
215:Brazilian Revolution of 1930
107:1900–1970s (other countries)
27:German semi-automatic pistol
7:
5710:Multi-Star Signal Cartridge
5705:Model 1943 Stielhandgranate
5695:Model 1924 Stielhandgranate
4399:Weapons of Mass Destruction
4005:jwh1975 (18 October 2015).
3232:Bishop, Chris, ed. (1998).
3209:InRangeTV (18 April 2016),
3118:. Metrobooks. p. 228.
3112:Bishop, Chris, ed. (2002).
2923:Bishop, Chris, ed. (1998).
2146:
1373:using the same toggle-bolt
1290:in front-line service. The
1117:
940:, which was used by German
834:. The LP08 was used by the
493:Toggle-locked, short recoil
392:(equivalent to €72 in 2021)
32:Parabellum (disambiguation)
10:
6391:
5670:Gross Gewehr-Panzergranate
5208:German firearms and light
4642:Stewart, Major Michael P.
3627:"The Luger of the Tropics"
2272:(in Brazilian Portuguese).
2081:Organisation armée secrète
1123:Model 1900 and Swiss Luger
870:, the P08 was used by the
654:
592:. It was followed by the "
36:
29:
6271:
6214:
6157:
6136:
6037:
5763:
5640:
5602:
5568:
5417:
5364:
5278:
5220:
5132:
5090:
5058:
5025:
5007:
4969:
4921:
4874:Standard Catalog of Luger
4480:Magalhães, Mário (2012).
4318:10.1515/9783110956863.119
3888:Standard Catalog of Luger
2975:Standard Catalog of Luger
2362:
2314:: Ulrich Pfister, 2010. "
2057:Ação Libertadora Nacional
1583:Dutch forces in Indonesia
1277:Pistole Modell 1908 (P08)
647:Si vis pacem, para bellum
533:
525:
517:
507:
497:
487:
464:
459:
436:
432:222 mm (8.7 in)
428:
420:
415:
404:
396:
382:
333:
325:
315:
310:
180:Irish War of Independence
127:
114:
97:
92:
83:Place of origin
82:
72:
55:
48:
6218:and other larger weapons
5730:Propaganda-Gewehrgranate
5700:Model 1939 Eihandgranate
5660:Fallschirm Leuchtpatrone
5540:Einstossflammenwerfer 46
4699:Rottman, Gordon (2011).
3962:. Salamander Books Ltd.
3866:Cormack, A.J.R. (1972).
3552:Rottman, Gordon (2013).
2250:Jowett, Phillip (2018),
1414:National Liberation Army
1395:
1102:Aaron Davis, writing in
886:Luger toggle-lock action
503:116 rpm (semi-automatic)
240:Second Sino-Japanese War
5750:Wurfgranate Patrone 326
5675:Gewehr-Granatpatrone 40
5510:Raketen-Panzerbüchse 43
4850:15 January 2014 at the
4537:"Les armes de l'O.A.S."
4465:Meadows, Scott (2010).
3808:Jowett, Philip (2010).
3773:Jowett, Philip (2012).
3440:(2006), p. xx (Introd.)
2671:The 1907 Pistol Trials,
2463:Farwell, Byron (2001).
2439:"DWM Luger P-08 Pistol"
2385:German Infantry Weapons
2326:: Coos Santing, 2007,
1749:Italian Social Republic
1225:Luger 04 Pistol of the
1070:manufactured, 9mm Kurz.
967:William B. "Bill" Ruger
796:was filmed, recheck by
759:Philippine Insurrection
286:Portuguese Colonial War
245:1947–1949 Palestine war
140:Philippine-American War
5861:Bren light machine gun
5525:Fliegerfaust/Luftfaust
5435:Schwarzlose MG M.07/12
5327:M30 Luftwaffe drilling
5307:Gewehr 43/Karabiner 43
4678:Bishop, Chris (2002).
4352:www.thefreelibrary.com
4082:Riccio, Ralph (2013).
3958:Miller, David (2001).
3753:www.thefreelibrary.com
3723:Miller, David (2007).
3703:www.thefreelibrary.com
3652:www.thefreelibrary.com
3416:For The Love Of Lugers
3025:Finland at War 1939–45
2964:, Ravenio Books (1961)
2911:Ordnance Went Up Front
1846:Dutch East Indies Army
1762:Imperial State of Iran
1432:North African campaign
1325:
1229:
1132:
1071:
1059:
957:
903:
895:
887:
767:Thompson–LaGarde Tests
751:Steyr Mannlicher M1894
691:German adoption trials
669:Ordonnanzrevolver 1872
645:
590:Modell 1900 Parabellum
499:Rate of fire
5938:PPS-43 submachine gun
5765:Notable foreign-made
5735:Shaving Stick Grenade
5312:Grossfuss Sturmgewehr
3938:www.jaegerplatoon.net
3886:Davis, Aaron (2006).
3779:. Osprey Publishing.
3574:Walter, John (1991).
3169:Walter, John (2001).
2320:University of Münster
1386:Maschinenpistole Senn
1343:stormtrooper infantry
1323:
1224:
1130:
1065:
1057:
955:
901:
893:
885:
665:semi-automatic pistol
576:Borchardt C-93 pistol
565:semi-automatic pistol
369:(final assembly only)
345:Imperial Arsenals of
301:Operation Urgent Fury
77:Semi-automatic pistol
6294:Panssarimiina m/S-39
6235:Lahti-Saloranta M/26
6057:7.65×21mm Parabellum
6052:7.65×17mmSR Browning
5685:Gewehr-Sprenggranate
5665:Gewehr-Panzergranate
5423:other larger weapons
4999:Mauser 1918 T-Gewehr
4961:M1879 Reichsrevolver
4913:infantry weapons of
4110:, Gun Digest Books,
3913:The Luger in Finland
3842:"მსუბუქი შეიარაღება"
3680:, Gun Digest Books,
3502:"German Luger rifle"
3328:ForgottenWeapons.com
3263:"The Nazis' Handgun"
3093:The Parabellum Story
3003:, Gun Digest Books,
2750:on 15 November 2004.
2340:and Mitchell, B. R.
1371:semi-automatic rifle
1328:The adoption of the
1234:Imperial German Navy
1227:Imperial German Navy
1137:7.65×21mm Parabellum
1086:National Gendarmerie
852:Treaty of Versailles
822:At the beginning of
753:, and an entry from
706:Imperial German Navy
698:7.65×21mm Parabellum
602:'Pistole Modell 1908
509:Muzzle velocity
474:7.65×21mm Parabellum
6248:Lahti L-39 AT-rifle
6022:Thompson Model 1928
6017:as Karabiner 455(a)
5901:Beretta Model 38/42
5720:Panzerwurfkörper 42
5550:Solothurn S-18/1000
5265:Dreyse M1907 Pistol
4644:"Art of War Papers"
4128:Grey Tiger (2015).
3359:(1997), pp. 185-185
3288:Hackworth, David H.
2669:American Rifleman,
2329:Inflation 1800-2000
1533:Kingdom of Bulgaria
1284:Pistole Modell 1908
1177:After testing, the
816:Maji Maji Rebellion
265:1958 Lebanon crisis
145:Maji-Maji Rebellion
104:1904–1953 (Germany)
39:P8 (disambiguation)
6299:Panssarimiina m/44
6289:Panssarimiina m/39
6284:Panssarimiina m/36
6243:Solothurn S-18/154
6072:7.92×94mm Patronen
6038:German cartridges
5844:as Gewehr 33/40(t)
5346:MP 43/MP 44/StG 44
5317:Karabinek wz. 1929
5245:Walther PP and PPK
5108:Grossflammenwerfer
5101:Kleinflammenwerfer
4989:Mauser Modell 1907
4766:Third Reich Lugers
4510:lebaneseforces.com
3846:history.mod.gov.ge
3508:. 17 December 2010
3428:Dolan, Samuel K.,
2129:Yugoslav Partisans
2051:Non-state entities
1605:Finnish White Army
1326:
1230:
1145:Springfield Armory
1133:
1072:
1060:
958:
904:
896:
888:
594:Marinepistole 1904
549:Parabellum-Pistole
545:Pistole Parabellum
388:ℛ︁ℳ︁
311:Production history
291:Rhodesian Bush War
281:Lebanese Civil War
6312:
6311:
6095:
6094:
6077:9×19mm Parabellum
5888:Browning wz. 1928
5822:as Pistole 645(p)
5802:as Pistole 660(a)
5794:as Pistole 640(b)
5791:Browning Hi-Power
5786:as Pistole 657(n)
5778:as Pistole 625(f)
5604:Grenade launchers
5175:
5174:
4946:Mauser Model 1914
4869:Forgotten Weapons
4691:978-1-58663-762-0
4540:Gazette des Armes
4491:978-85-359-2170-0
4327:978-3-598-21816-3
4136:on 5 October 2016
3827:978-1-84908-402-4
3786:978-1-299-58155-5
3734:978-0-8117-0277-5
3612:978-1-84908-901-2
3585:978-0-85368-886-0
3506:Forgotten Weapons
3305:978-0-67169-534-7
3091:Stephenson, Jan,
3053:Waldron, Arthur,
1547:Republic of China
1316:(Artillery Luger)
1300:9×19mm Parabellum
1191:Waffenfabrik Bern
1088:as late as 1970.
1050:Post-World War II
1013:Chinese Civil War
810:German combat use
779:Frankford Arsenal
723:Kaiser Wilhelm II
712:later simply the
702:9×19mm Parabellum
613:9×19mm Parabellum
553:Pistol Parabellum
541:
540:
479:9×19mm Parabellum
276:Laotian Civil War
230:Spanish Civil War
210:Chinese Civil War
190:Finnish Civil War
185:Russian Civil War
175:German Revolution
16:(Redirected from
6382:
6279:Molotov cocktail
6258:7,62 ItKk 31 VKT
6122:
6115:
6108:
6099:
6098:
6067:7.92×57mm Mauser
6047:7.63×25mm Mauser
6040:of the Wehrmacht
6028:
6009:as Gewehr 249(a)
6001:as Gewehr 250(a)
5992:
5980:
5968:
5956:
5944:
5932:
5919:
5907:
5895:
5882:
5867:
5855:
5819:Radom wz. 35 Vis
5813:
5622:Leuchtpistole 42
5617:Leuchtpistole 34
5535:Flammenwerfer 41
5530:Flammenwerfer 35
5202:
5195:
5188:
5179:
5178:
5162:7.92x57mm Mauser
5147:7.63×25mm Mauser
5082:Model 17 grenade
5076:Kugelhandgranate
5069:Stielhandgranate
4936:Langenhan pistol
4904:
4897:
4890:
4881:
4880:
4778:Lugers at Random
4743:
4724:
4695:
4666:
4665:
4663:
4661:
4655:
4648:
4639:
4633:
4632:
4620:
4614:
4613:
4602:
4596:
4595:
4583:
4577:
4576:
4574:
4572:
4558:belfasttelegraph
4550:
4544:
4543:
4532:
4526:
4525:
4523:
4521:
4512:. Archived from
4502:
4496:
4495:
4477:
4471:
4470:
4462:
4456:
4450:
4444:
4443:
4441:
4439:
4424:
4418:
4417:
4415:
4413:
4391:
4385:
4384:
4383:
4381:
4369:
4363:
4362:
4360:
4358:
4344:
4338:
4337:
4336:
4334:
4302:
4296:
4295:
4293:
4291:
4286:on 27 March 2012
4276:
4270:
4269:
4267:
4265:
4250:
4241:
4240:
4218:
4212:
4211:
4188:
4182:
4181:
4179:
4171:
4165:
4164:
4159:Görtz, Joachim.
4156:
4150:
4149:
4143:
4141:
4125:
4119:
4104:
4098:
4097:
4079:
4073:
4070:
4064:
4063:
4061:
4059:
4045:
4036:
4035:
4029:
4021:
4019:
4017:
4002:
3996:
3995:
3994:
3992:
3980:
3974:
3973:
3955:
3949:
3948:
3946:
3944:
3930:
3924:
3923:
3922:
3920:
3908:
3902:
3901:
3883:
3872:
3871:
3863:
3857:
3856:
3854:
3852:
3838:
3832:
3831:
3815:
3805:
3799:
3798:
3770:
3764:
3763:
3761:
3759:
3745:
3739:
3738:
3720:
3714:
3713:
3711:
3709:
3695:
3689:
3674:
3663:
3662:
3660:
3658:
3644:
3638:
3637:
3635:
3633:
3623:
3617:
3616:
3596:
3590:
3589:
3571:
3558:
3557:
3549:
3543:
3542:
3540:
3538:
3524:
3518:
3517:
3515:
3513:
3498:
3492:
3486:
3477:
3462:
3456:
3447:
3441:
3426:
3420:
3411:
3405:
3399:
3393:
3390:
3384:
3381:
3372:
3366:
3360:
3345:
3339:
3338:
3336:
3334:
3319:
3310:
3309:
3297:
3284:
3278:
3277:
3275:
3273:
3258:
3249:
3247:
3229:
3223:
3222:
3221:
3219:
3206:
3200:
3194:
3185:
3184:
3166:
3155:
3152:
3146:
3143:
3137:
3136:
3134:
3132:
3109:
3096:
3089:
3066:
3051:
3045:
3044:
3028:
3018:
3012:
2997:
2978:
2971:
2965:
2958:
2943:
2942:
2925:"MP 18 and MP28"
2920:
2914:
2907:
2901:
2900:
2882:
2876:
2875:
2874:
2872:
2860:
2854:
2848:
2833:
2827:
2821:
2815:
2809:
2803:
2797:
2791:
2782:
2781:, p. 38-40.
2776:
2767:
2761:
2752:
2751:
2746:. Archived from
2736:
2730:
2729:
2711:
2705:
2704:
2693:
2687:
2680:
2674:
2667:
2652:
2651:
2649:
2647:
2632:
2621:
2615:
2609:
2603:
2597:
2591:
2585:
2579:
2573:
2567:
2561:
2555:
2546:
2540:
2531:
2525:
2516:
2510:
2504:
2503:
2501:
2499:
2485:
2479:
2478:
2460:
2454:
2453:
2451:
2449:
2435:
2422:
2421:
2413:
2402:
2396:
2390:
2389:
2380:
2374:
2371:GENESIS database
2365:
2364:
2309:
2303:
2297:
2291:
2285:
2274:
2273:
2261:
2255:
2248:
2242:
2241:
2233:
2220:
2217:The Luger Pistol
2215:Datig, Fred A.,
2213:
2139:
2138:
2137:
2127:
2126:
2125:
2115:
2114:
2113:
2103:
2102:
2101:
2091:
2090:
2089:
2079:
2078:
2077:
2067:
2066:
2065:
2042:
2040:
2039:
2025:
2023:
2022:
2012:
2010:
2009:
1999:
1997:
1996:
1985:
1983:
1982:
1972:
1970:
1969:
1958:
1956:
1955:
1945:
1943:
1942:
1931:
1929:
1928:
1918:
1916:
1915:
1904:
1902:
1901:
1886:
1884:
1883:
1872:
1870:
1869:
1858:
1856:
1855:
1840:
1838:
1837:
1827:
1825:
1824:
1813:
1811:
1810:
1800:
1798:
1797:
1787:
1785:
1784:
1773:
1771:
1770:
1760:
1759:
1758:
1747:
1745:
1744:
1721:
1719:
1718:
1708:
1706:
1705:
1684:
1682:
1681:
1671:
1669:
1668:
1658:
1656:
1655:
1645:
1643:
1642:
1632:
1630:
1629:
1618:
1616:
1615:
1608:9mm ammunition.
1595:
1593:
1592:
1577:
1575:
1574:
1563:
1561:
1560:
1545:
1543:
1542:
1531:
1529:
1528:
1517:
1515:
1514:
1503:
1501:
1500:
1489:
1487:
1486:
1475:
1473:
1472:
1458:
1456:
1455:
1444:
1442:
1441:
1426:
1424:
1423:
1408:
1406:
1405:
1379:7.92x57mm Mauser
1330:Lange Pistole 08
1314:Lange Pistole 08
836:Luftstreitkräfte
793:Tales of the Gun
677:Mannlicher M1901
650:
526:Feed system
407:
60:
51:
46:
45:
21:
18:Luger P08 pistol
6390:
6389:
6385:
6384:
6383:
6381:
6380:
6379:
6345:Machine pistols
6315:
6314:
6313:
6308:
6267:
6253:8 mm pst kiv/38
6210:
6181:M/39 Ukko-Pekka
6176:M/27 Pystykorva
6163:submachine guns
6153:
6132:
6126:
6096:
6091:
6039:
6033:
5974:Kb ppanc wz. 35
5883:148(j)/MG 37(t)
5833:as Gewehr 24(t)
5766:
5759:
5636:
5598:
5564:
5545:Panzerbüchse 39
5422:
5413:
5366:Submachine guns
5360:
5274:
5216:
5206:
5176:
5171:
5128:
5086:
5054:
5021:
5009:Submachine guns
5003:
4994:Mondragón rifle
4965:
4917:
4908:
4852:Wayback Machine
4805:
4760:Imperial Lugers
4750:
4748:Further reading
4740:
4713:
4692:
4669:
4659:
4657:
4653:
4646:
4640:
4636:
4621:
4617:
4604:
4603:
4599:
4592:Washington Post
4584:
4580:
4570:
4568:
4552:
4551:
4547:
4533:
4529:
4519:
4517:
4516:on 2 April 2015
4504:
4503:
4499:
4492:
4478:
4474:
4463:
4459:
4451:
4447:
4437:
4435:
4426:
4425:
4421:
4411:
4409:
4393:
4392:
4388:
4379:
4377:
4371:
4370:
4366:
4356:
4354:
4346:
4345:
4341:
4332:
4330:
4328:
4304:
4303:
4299:
4289:
4287:
4278:
4277:
4273:
4263:
4261:
4251:
4244:
4237:
4219:
4215:
4208:
4190:
4189:
4185:
4177:
4173:
4172:
4168:
4157:
4153:
4139:
4137:
4126:
4122:
4105:
4101:
4094:
4080:
4076:
4071:
4067:
4057:
4055:
4047:
4046:
4039:
4023:
4022:
4015:
4013:
4003:
3999:
3990:
3988:
3982:
3981:
3977:
3970:
3956:
3952:
3942:
3940:
3932:
3931:
3927:
3918:
3916:
3910:
3909:
3905:
3898:
3884:
3875:
3864:
3860:
3850:
3848:
3840:
3839:
3835:
3828:
3806:
3802:
3787:
3771:
3767:
3757:
3755:
3747:
3746:
3742:
3735:
3721:
3717:
3707:
3705:
3697:
3696:
3692:
3675:
3666:
3656:
3654:
3646:
3645:
3641:
3631:
3629:
3625:
3624:
3620:
3613:
3597:
3593:
3586:
3572:
3561:
3550:
3546:
3536:
3534:
3526:
3525:
3521:
3511:
3509:
3500:
3499:
3495:
3487:
3480:
3463:
3459:
3449:Farris, David,
3448:
3444:
3427:
3423:
3413:Skelton, Bart,
3412:
3408:
3400:
3396:
3391:
3387:
3382:
3375:
3367:
3363:
3347:Cohen, Paul A.
3346:
3342:
3332:
3330:
3320:
3313:
3306:
3285:
3281:
3271:
3269:
3259:
3252:
3244:
3230:
3226:
3217:
3215:
3207:
3203:
3195:
3188:
3181:
3171:The Luger Story
3167:
3158:
3153:
3149:
3144:
3140:
3130:
3128:
3126:
3110:
3099:
3090:
3069:
3052:
3048:
3041:
3019:
3015:
2998:
2981:
2972:
2968:
2959:
2946:
2939:
2921:
2917:
2908:
2904:
2897:
2883:
2879:
2870:
2868:
2862:
2861:
2857:
2849:
2836:
2828:
2824:
2816:
2812:
2804:
2800:
2792:
2785:
2777:
2770:
2762:
2755:
2738:
2737:
2733:
2728:on 4 June 2013.
2721:Guns & Ammo
2712:
2708:
2695:
2694:
2690:
2681:
2677:
2668:
2655:
2645:
2643:
2633:
2624:
2616:
2612:
2604:
2600:
2592:
2588:
2580:
2576:
2568:
2564:
2556:
2549:
2541:
2534:
2526:
2519:
2511:
2507:
2497:
2495:
2487:
2486:
2482:
2475:
2461:
2457:
2447:
2445:
2437:
2436:
2425:
2414:
2405:
2397:
2393:
2382:
2381:
2377:
2310:
2306:
2298:
2294:
2286:
2277:
2262:
2258:
2249:
2245:
2236:
2234:
2223:
2214:
2185:
2176:
2149:
2135:
2133:
2123:
2121:
2111:
2109:
2099:
2097:
2087:
2085:
2075:
2073:
2069:Lebanese Forces
2063:
2061:
2053:
2037:
2035:
2020:
2018:
2007:
2005:
1994:
1992:
1980:
1978:
1967:
1965:
1953:
1951:
1940:
1938:
1926:
1924:
1913:
1911:
1899:
1897:
1881:
1879:
1867:
1865:
1853:
1851:
1835:
1833:
1822:
1820:
1808:
1806:
1795:
1793:
1782:
1780:
1768:
1766:
1756:
1754:
1742:
1740:
1716:
1714:
1703:
1701:
1679:
1677:
1666:
1664:
1660:Weimar Republic
1653:
1651:
1640:
1638:
1627:
1625:
1613:
1611:
1590:
1588:
1579:Empire of Japan
1572:
1570:
1558:
1556:
1551:Chang Tso-lin's
1540:
1538:
1526:
1524:
1512:
1510:
1498:
1496:
1484:
1482:
1470:
1468:
1453:
1451:
1439:
1437:
1434:of World War II
1421:
1419:
1403:
1401:
1398:
1389:
1367:
1318:
1280:
1272:specification.
1254:
1219:
1210:
1193:, Switzerland.
1187:Pistole 1900/06
1175:
1141:Boxer Rebellion
1125:
1120:
1108:David Hackworth
1052:
1033:
984:
982:Interwar period
950:
922:Submachine guns
880:
856:submachine guns
812:
799:Guns & Ammo
788:History Channel
731:
693:
657:
624:Weimar Republic
483:
460:
455:
391:
378:
306:
205:1923 Revolution
200:Tenente Revolts
195:Irish Civil War
135:Boxer Rebellion
110:
98:In service
93:Service history
68:
49:
42:
35:
28:
23:
22:
15:
12:
11:
5:
6388:
6378:
6377:
6372:
6367:
6362:
6357:
6352:
6347:
6342:
6337:
6332:
6327:
6310:
6309:
6307:
6306:
6301:
6296:
6291:
6286:
6281:
6275:
6273:
6269:
6268:
6266:
6265:
6260:
6255:
6250:
6245:
6240:
6237:
6232:
6227:
6221:
6219:
6212:
6211:
6209:
6208:
6203:
6198:
6196:Carcano Mod.38
6193:
6191:Carcano Mod.91
6188:
6183:
6178:
6173:
6167:
6165:
6155:
6154:
6152:
6151:
6146:
6140:
6138:
6134:
6133:
6125:
6124:
6117:
6110:
6102:
6093:
6092:
6090:
6089:
6084:
6079:
6074:
6069:
6064:
6062:7.92×33mm Kurz
6059:
6054:
6049:
6043:
6041:
6035:
6034:
6032:
6031:
6019:
6011:
6003:
5995:
5983:
5971:
5959:
5947:
5935:
5922:
5910:
5898:
5885:
5870:
5858:
5846:
5835:
5824:
5816:
5804:
5796:
5788:
5783:Kongsberg Colt
5780:
5771:
5769:
5761:
5760:
5758:
5757:
5755:Wurfkörper 361
5752:
5747:
5742:
5737:
5732:
5727:
5725:Panzerwurfmine
5722:
5717:
5712:
5707:
5702:
5697:
5692:
5690:Hafthohlladung
5687:
5682:
5677:
5672:
5667:
5662:
5657:
5655:Blendkörper 2H
5652:
5650:Blendkörper 1H
5646:
5644:
5638:
5637:
5635:
5634:
5629:
5624:
5619:
5614:
5608:
5606:
5600:
5599:
5597:
5596:
5591:
5589:kz 8 cm GrW 42
5586:
5581:
5575:
5573:
5566:
5565:
5563:
5562:
5557:
5552:
5547:
5542:
5537:
5532:
5527:
5522:
5517:
5512:
5507:
5502:
5497:
5492:
5487:
5482:
5477:
5472:
5467:
5462:
5457:
5452:
5447:
5442:
5437:
5432:
5426:
5424:
5415:
5414:
5412:
5411:
5406:
5401:
5396:
5391:
5386:
5381:
5376:
5370:
5368:
5362:
5361:
5359:
5358:
5353:
5348:
5343:
5338:
5329:
5324:
5319:
5314:
5309:
5304:
5299:
5294:
5288:
5286:
5276:
5275:
5273:
5272:
5267:
5262:
5257:
5252:
5247:
5242:
5237:
5232:
5226:
5224:
5218:
5217:
5205:
5204:
5197:
5190:
5182:
5173:
5172:
5170:
5169:
5164:
5159:
5154:
5149:
5144:
5142:9mm Parabellum
5138:
5136:
5130:
5129:
5127:
5126:
5123:Wechselapparat
5119:
5111:
5104:
5096:
5094:
5088:
5087:
5085:
5084:
5079:
5072:
5064:
5062:
5056:
5055:
5053:
5052:
5047:
5042:
5037:
5031:
5029:
5023:
5022:
5020:
5019:
5013:
5011:
5005:
5004:
5002:
5001:
4996:
4991:
4986:
4981:
4975:
4973:
4967:
4966:
4964:
4963:
4958:
4956:Beholla pistol
4953:
4948:
4943:
4938:
4933:
4927:
4925:
4919:
4918:
4907:
4906:
4899:
4892:
4884:
4878:
4877:
4870:
4864:
4859:
4854:
4842:
4837:
4832:
4827:
4822:
4816:
4811:
4804:
4803:External links
4801:
4800:
4799:
4793:
4787:
4781:
4775:
4769:
4763:
4757:
4749:
4746:
4745:
4744:
4738:
4725:
4712:978-1780961439
4711:
4696:
4690:
4674:
4673:
4668:
4667:
4634:
4615:
4597:
4578:
4545:
4527:
4497:
4490:
4472:
4469:. p. 386.
4457:
4445:
4434:on 24 May 2007
4419:
4386:
4364:
4339:
4326:
4297:
4271:
4242:
4235:
4213:
4206:
4183:
4166:
4163:. p. 537.
4151:
4120:
4106:Davis, Aaron,
4099:
4092:
4074:
4065:
4037:
3997:
3975:
3968:
3950:
3925:
3903:
3896:
3873:
3858:
3833:
3826:
3800:
3785:
3765:
3740:
3733:
3715:
3690:
3676:Davis, Aaron,
3664:
3639:
3618:
3611:
3591:
3584:
3559:
3544:
3532:firearms.96.lt
3519:
3493:
3478:
3464:Kinard, Jeff,
3457:
3442:
3421:
3406:
3394:
3385:
3373:
3361:
3340:
3311:
3304:
3279:
3250:
3242:
3224:
3201:
3186:
3179:
3156:
3147:
3138:
3124:
3097:
3067:
3046:
3039:
3013:
2999:Davis, Aaron,
2979:
2973:Davis, Aaron,
2966:
2960:Keith, Elmer,
2944:
2937:
2915:
2902:
2895:
2877:
2855:
2834:
2822:
2810:
2798:
2783:
2768:
2753:
2731:
2706:
2688:
2675:
2653:
2622:
2610:
2598:
2586:
2574:
2562:
2547:
2532:
2517:
2505:
2480:
2473:
2455:
2443:chuckhawks.com
2423:
2403:
2391:
2375:
2344:London :
2304:
2292:
2275:
2256:
2243:
2221:
2182:
2181:
2180:
2175:
2172:
2171:
2170:
2165:
2160:
2155:
2148:
2145:
2144:
2143:
2131:
2119:
2107:
2095:
2083:
2071:
2059:
2052:
2049:
2048:
2047:
2033:
2027:United Kingdom
2016:
2003:
1990:
1976:
1963:
1949:
1936:
1933:Russian Empire
1922:
1909:
1895:
1877:
1863:
1849:
1831:
1818:
1804:
1791:
1778:
1764:
1752:
1738:
1712:
1699:
1698:
1697:
1675:
1662:
1649:
1623:
1609:
1586:
1568:
1554:
1536:
1522:
1519:Czechoslovakia
1508:
1494:
1480:
1466:
1449:
1435:
1417:
1412:: Used by the
1397:
1394:
1388:
1383:
1366:
1363:
1317:
1311:
1288:Reichsrevolver
1279:
1274:
1253:
1246:
1238:9mm Parabellum
1218:
1215:
1209:
1206:
1202:SIG Sauer P210
1174:
1171:
1124:
1121:
1119:
1116:
1051:
1048:
1032:
1029:
983:
980:
949:
946:
879:
878:Design details
876:
832:drum magazines
811:
808:
763:stopping power
730:
727:
692:
689:
661:Borchardt C-93
656:
653:
539:
538:
535:
531:
530:
527:
523:
522:
519:
515:
514:
511:
505:
504:
501:
495:
494:
491:
485:
484:
482:
481:
476:
470:
468:
462:
461:
457:
456:
454:
453:
450:
447:
443:
441:
434:
433:
430:
426:
425:
422:
418:
417:
416:Specifications
413:
412:
409:
402:
401:
398:
394:
393:
384:
383:Unit cost
380:
379:
377:
376:
370:
364:
359:
354:
349:
343:
337:
335:
331:
330:
327:
323:
322:
317:
313:
312:
308:
307:
305:
304:
298:
293:
288:
283:
278:
273:
267:
262:
257:
252:
247:
242:
237:
232:
227:
222:
217:
212:
207:
202:
197:
192:
187:
182:
177:
172:
167:
162:
160:Contestado War
157:
152:
147:
142:
137:
131:
129:
125:
124:
116:
112:
111:
109:
108:
105:
101:
99:
95:
94:
90:
89:
84:
80:
79:
74:
70:
69:
61:
53:
52:
26:
9:
6:
4:
3:
2:
6387:
6376:
6373:
6371:
6368:
6366:
6363:
6361:
6358:
6356:
6353:
6351:
6348:
6346:
6343:
6341:
6338:
6336:
6333:
6331:
6328:
6326:
6323:
6322:
6320:
6305:
6302:
6300:
6297:
6295:
6292:
6290:
6287:
6285:
6282:
6280:
6277:
6276:
6274:
6270:
6264:
6263:20 ItK 40 VKT
6261:
6259:
6256:
6254:
6251:
6249:
6246:
6244:
6241:
6238:
6236:
6233:
6231:
6230:Maxim M/32-33
6228:
6226:
6225:Maxim M/09-21
6223:
6222:
6220:
6217:
6213:
6207:
6204:
6202:
6199:
6197:
6194:
6192:
6189:
6187:
6184:
6182:
6179:
6177:
6174:
6172:
6169:
6168:
6166:
6164:
6160:
6156:
6150:
6147:
6145:
6142:
6141:
6139:
6135:
6131:
6123:
6118:
6116:
6111:
6109:
6104:
6103:
6100:
6088:
6085:
6083:
6080:
6078:
6075:
6073:
6070:
6068:
6065:
6063:
6060:
6058:
6055:
6053:
6050:
6048:
6045:
6044:
6042:
6036:
6030:
6023:
6020:
6018:
6015:
6012:
6010:
6007:
6006:M1903 Enfield
6004:
6002:
5999:
5998:M1917 Enfield
5996:
5994:
5987:
5984:
5982:
5975:
5972:
5970:
5963:
5960:
5958:
5951:
5948:
5946:
5939:
5936:
5934:
5926:
5923:
5921:
5914:
5911:
5909:
5902:
5899:
5897:
5889:
5886:
5884:
5877:
5875:
5871:
5869:
5862:
5859:
5857:
5850:
5847:
5845:
5842:
5840:
5836:
5834:
5831:
5829:
5825:
5823:
5820:
5817:
5815:
5808:
5805:
5803:
5800:
5797:
5795:
5792:
5789:
5787:
5784:
5781:
5779:
5776:
5773:
5772:
5770:
5768:
5762:
5756:
5753:
5751:
5748:
5746:
5745:Sprengpatrone
5743:
5741:
5738:
5736:
5733:
5731:
5728:
5726:
5723:
5721:
5718:
5716:
5713:
5711:
5708:
5706:
5703:
5701:
5698:
5696:
5693:
5691:
5688:
5686:
5683:
5681:
5678:
5676:
5673:
5671:
5668:
5666:
5663:
5661:
5658:
5656:
5653:
5651:
5648:
5647:
5645:
5643:
5639:
5633:
5630:
5628:
5627:Schiessbecher
5625:
5623:
5620:
5618:
5615:
5613:
5610:
5609:
5607:
5605:
5601:
5595:
5592:
5590:
5587:
5585:
5582:
5580:
5579:5 cm leGrW 36
5577:
5576:
5574:
5572:
5567:
5561:
5558:
5556:
5553:
5551:
5548:
5546:
5543:
5541:
5538:
5536:
5533:
5531:
5528:
5526:
5523:
5521:
5520:Panzerschreck
5518:
5516:
5513:
5511:
5508:
5506:
5503:
5501:
5498:
5496:
5493:
5491:
5488:
5486:
5483:
5481:
5478:
5476:
5473:
5471:
5468:
5466:
5463:
5461:
5458:
5456:
5453:
5451:
5448:
5446:
5443:
5441:
5438:
5436:
5433:
5431:
5428:
5427:
5425:
5420:
5416:
5410:
5407:
5405:
5402:
5400:
5397:
5395:
5392:
5390:
5387:
5385:
5382:
5380:
5377:
5375:
5372:
5371:
5369:
5367:
5363:
5357:
5354:
5352:
5349:
5347:
5344:
5342:
5339:
5337:
5333:
5330:
5328:
5325:
5323:
5322:Karabiner 98k
5320:
5318:
5315:
5313:
5310:
5308:
5305:
5303:
5300:
5298:
5295:
5293:
5290:
5289:
5287:
5285:
5281:
5277:
5271:
5268:
5266:
5263:
5261:
5258:
5256:
5253:
5251:
5248:
5246:
5243:
5241:
5238:
5236:
5233:
5231:
5228:
5227:
5225:
5223:
5219:
5215:
5211:
5203:
5198:
5196:
5191:
5189:
5184:
5183:
5180:
5168:
5165:
5163:
5160:
5158:
5155:
5153:
5150:
5148:
5145:
5143:
5140:
5139:
5137:
5135:
5131:
5125:
5124:
5120:
5118:
5116:
5115:Flammenwerfer
5112:
5110:
5109:
5105:
5103:
5102:
5098:
5097:
5095:
5093:
5092:Flamethrowers
5089:
5083:
5080:
5078:
5077:
5073:
5071:
5070:
5066:
5065:
5063:
5061:
5057:
5051:
5048:
5046:
5043:
5041:
5038:
5036:
5033:
5032:
5030:
5028:
5024:
5018:
5015:
5014:
5012:
5010:
5006:
5000:
4997:
4995:
4992:
4990:
4987:
4985:
4982:
4980:
4977:
4976:
4974:
4972:
4968:
4962:
4959:
4957:
4954:
4952:
4949:
4947:
4944:
4942:
4939:
4937:
4934:
4932:
4929:
4928:
4926:
4924:
4920:
4916:
4912:
4905:
4900:
4898:
4893:
4891:
4886:
4885:
4882:
4876:
4875:
4871:
4868:
4865:
4863:
4860:
4858:
4855:
4853:
4849:
4846:
4843:
4841:
4838:
4836:
4833:
4831:
4828:
4826:
4823:
4820:
4817:
4815:
4812:
4810:
4807:
4806:
4797:
4794:
4791:
4788:
4785:
4784:Simson Lugers
4782:
4779:
4776:
4773:
4772:Weimar Lugers
4770:
4767:
4764:
4761:
4758:
4755:
4752:
4751:
4741:
4739:9781472819734
4735:
4731:
4726:
4722:
4718:
4714:
4708:
4704:
4703:
4697:
4693:
4687:
4683:
4682:
4676:
4675:
4671:
4670:
4652:
4645:
4638:
4630:
4629:Firearms News
4626:
4619:
4611:
4607:
4601:
4593:
4589:
4582:
4567:
4563:
4559:
4555:
4549:
4541:
4538:
4531:
4515:
4511:
4507:
4501:
4493:
4487:
4483:
4476:
4468:
4461:
4455:, p. 69.
4454:
4449:
4433:
4429:
4423:
4408:
4404:
4400:
4396:
4390:
4376:
4375:
4368:
4353:
4349:
4343:
4329:
4323:
4319:
4315:
4311:
4307:
4301:
4285:
4281:
4275:
4260:
4256:
4249:
4247:
4238:
4236:972-8816-43-X
4232:
4228:
4224:
4217:
4209:
4203:
4199:
4195:
4194:
4187:
4176:
4170:
4162:
4155:
4147:
4135:
4131:
4124:
4118:(2006) p. 182
4117:
4116:9780896894112
4113:
4109:
4103:
4095:
4093:9780764345838
4089:
4085:
4078:
4069:
4054:
4050:
4044:
4042:
4033:
4027:
4012:
4011:wwiiafterwwii
4008:
4001:
3987:
3986:
3979:
3971:
3969:1-84065-245-4
3965:
3961:
3954:
3939:
3935:
3929:
3915:
3914:
3907:
3899:
3897:0-89689-411-8
3893:
3889:
3882:
3880:
3878:
3869:
3862:
3847:
3843:
3837:
3829:
3823:
3819:
3814:
3813:
3804:
3796:
3792:
3788:
3782:
3778:
3777:
3769:
3754:
3750:
3744:
3736:
3730:
3726:
3719:
3704:
3700:
3694:
3687:
3686:9780896894112
3683:
3679:
3673:
3671:
3669:
3653:
3649:
3643:
3628:
3622:
3614:
3608:
3604:
3603:
3595:
3587:
3581:
3577:
3570:
3568:
3566:
3564:
3555:
3548:
3533:
3529:
3523:
3507:
3503:
3497:
3491:, p. 28.
3490:
3485:
3483:
3475:
3471:
3467:
3461:
3454:
3453:
3446:
3439:
3438:9781442246690
3435:
3431:
3425:
3418:
3417:
3410:
3403:
3398:
3389:
3380:
3378:
3370:
3365:
3358:
3354:
3350:
3344:
3329:
3325:
3318:
3316:
3307:
3301:
3296:
3295:
3289:
3283:
3268:
3267:War Is Boring
3264:
3257:
3255:
3245:
3243:0-7607-1022-8
3239:
3235:
3228:
3214:
3213:
3205:
3199:, p. 58.
3198:
3193:
3191:
3182:
3180:1-85367-436-2
3176:
3172:
3165:
3163:
3161:
3151:
3142:
3127:
3125:1-58663-762-2
3121:
3117:
3116:
3108:
3106:
3104:
3102:
3094:
3088:
3086:
3084:
3082:
3080:
3078:
3076:
3074:
3072:
3065:(1995), p. 57
3064:
3060:
3056:
3050:
3042:
3040:9781841769691
3036:
3032:
3027:
3026:
3017:
3010:
3009:9780896894112
3006:
3002:
2996:
2994:
2992:
2990:
2988:
2986:
2984:
2976:
2970:
2963:
2957:
2955:
2953:
2951:
2949:
2940:
2934:
2930:
2926:
2919:
2912:
2909:Dunlap, Roy,
2906:
2898:
2896:0-87341-824-7
2892:
2888:
2881:
2867:
2866:
2859:
2853:, p. 59.
2852:
2847:
2845:
2843:
2841:
2839:
2832:, p. 51.
2831:
2826:
2820:, p. 50.
2819:
2814:
2808:, p. 47.
2807:
2802:
2796:, p. 40.
2795:
2790:
2788:
2780:
2775:
2773:
2766:, p. 38.
2765:
2760:
2758:
2749:
2745:
2741:
2735:
2727:
2723:
2722:
2717:
2710:
2702:
2698:
2692:
2685:
2679:
2672:
2666:
2664:
2662:
2660:
2658:
2642:
2638:
2631:
2629:
2627:
2620:, p. 16.
2619:
2614:
2608:, p. 15.
2607:
2602:
2596:, p. 22.
2595:
2590:
2584:, p. 21.
2583:
2578:
2572:, p. 20.
2571:
2566:
2560:, p. 19.
2559:
2554:
2552:
2545:, p. 13.
2544:
2539:
2537:
2530:, p. 12.
2529:
2524:
2522:
2515:, p. 10.
2514:
2509:
2494:
2490:
2484:
2476:
2474:0-393-04770-9
2470:
2466:
2459:
2444:
2440:
2434:
2432:
2430:
2428:
2419:
2412:
2410:
2408:
2400:
2395:
2387:
2386:
2379:
2372:
2368:
2359:
2355:
2351:
2347:
2343:
2339:
2335:
2331:
2330:
2325:
2321:
2317:
2313:
2308:
2301:
2296:
2290:, p. 57.
2289:
2284:
2282:
2280:
2271:
2270:Armas On-Line
2267:
2260:
2253:
2247:
2239:
2232:
2230:
2228:
2226:
2218:
2212:
2210:
2208:
2206:
2204:
2202:
2200:
2198:
2196:
2194:
2192:
2190:
2188:
2183:
2178:
2177:
2169:
2166:
2164:
2163:Stoeger Luger
2161:
2159:
2156:
2154:
2151:
2150:
2142:
2132:
2130:
2120:
2118:
2108:
2106:
2096:
2094:
2084:
2082:
2072:
2070:
2060:
2058:
2055:
2054:
2045:
2044:United States
2034:
2032:
2028:
2017:
2015:
2004:
2002:
1991:
1988:
1977:
1975:
1964:
1961:
1950:
1948:
1937:
1934:
1923:
1921:
1910:
1907:
1896:
1893:
1889:
1878:
1875:
1864:
1861:
1850:
1847:
1843:
1832:
1830:
1819:
1816:
1805:
1803:
1792:
1790:
1779:
1776:
1765:
1763:
1753:
1750:
1739:
1736:
1732:
1728:
1724:
1713:
1711:
1700:
1695:
1691:
1687:
1676:
1674:
1663:
1661:
1650:
1648:
1647:German Empire
1637:
1636:
1635:
1624:
1621:
1610:
1606:
1602:
1598:
1587:
1584:
1580:
1569:
1566:
1555:
1553:warlord army.
1552:
1548:
1537:
1534:
1523:
1520:
1509:
1506:
1495:
1492:
1481:
1478:
1467:
1465:
1461:
1450:
1447:
1436:
1433:
1429:
1418:
1415:
1411:
1400:
1399:
1393:
1387:
1382:
1380:
1376:
1372:
1362:
1358:
1355:
1351:
1348:
1344:
1340:
1336:
1331:
1322:
1315:
1310:
1308:
1307:Bolivian Army
1303:
1301:
1297:
1293:
1289:
1285:
1278:
1273:
1271:
1267:
1263:
1259:
1251:
1245:
1243:
1239:
1235:
1228:
1223:
1214:
1205:
1203:
1199:
1194:
1192:
1188:
1184:
1180:
1170:
1168:
1162:
1159:
1155:
1150:
1146:
1142:
1138:
1129:
1115:
1113:
1109:
1105:
1100:
1096:
1094:
1089:
1087:
1083:
1078:
1069:
1064:
1056:
1047:
1044:
1040:
1038:
1028:
1026:
1021:
1016:
1014:
1008:
1006:
1001:
997:
996:Stoeger, Inc.
992:
990:
979:
976:
972:
971:.22 LR pistol
968:
964:
954:
945:
943:
942:Stormtroopers
939:
935:
932:
928:
923:
919:
915:
913:
909:
900:
892:
884:
875:
873:
869:
864:
859:
857:
853:
849:
845:
844:Stormtroopers
841:
837:
833:
829:
825:
820:
817:
807:
805:
801:
800:
795:
794:
789:
783:
780:
776:
770:
768:
764:
760:
756:
752:
748:
743:
741:
740:.38 Long Colt
737:
726:
724:
719:
715:
711:
707:
703:
699:
688:
686:
682:
678:
674:
670:
666:
662:
652:
649:
648:
642:
638:
633:
631:
630:
625:
620:
618:
614:
610:
609:
605:
597:
595:
591:
587:
586:
581:
577:
573:
568:
566:
562:
558:
554:
550:
546:
536:
532:
528:
524:
520:
516:
512:
510:
506:
502:
500:
496:
492:
490:
486:
480:
477:
475:
472:
471:
469:
467:
463:
458:
451:
448:
445:
444:
442:
439:
435:
431:
427:
423:
419:
414:
410:
403:
399:
395:
389:
385:
381:
375:
372:Waffenfabrik
371:
368:
365:
363:
360:
358:
355:
353:
350:
348:
344:
342:
339:
338:
336:
332:
328:
324:
321:
318:
314:
309:
303:(limited use)
302:
299:
297:
294:
292:
289:
287:
284:
282:
279:
277:
274:
272:(limited use)
271:
268:
266:
263:
261:
258:
256:
255:Indochina War
253:
251:
248:
246:
243:
241:
238:
236:
233:
231:
228:
226:
223:
221:
218:
216:
213:
211:
208:
206:
203:
201:
198:
196:
193:
191:
188:
186:
183:
181:
178:
176:
173:
171:
168:
166:
163:
161:
158:
156:
153:
151:
148:
146:
143:
141:
138:
136:
133:
132:
130:
126:
123:
122:
117:
113:
106:
103:
102:
100:
96:
91:
88:
87:German Empire
85:
81:
78:
75:
71:
66:
65:
59:
54:
50:Luger pistol
47:
44:
40:
33:
19:
6216:Machine-guns
6201:Suomi KP/-31
6171:M/91 Kivääri
6148:
6130:World War II
6024:
6016:
6008:
6000:
5988:
5976:
5964:
5952:
5940:
5928:
5915:
5903:
5891:
5878:
5873:
5863:
5851:
5843:
5838:
5832:
5827:
5821:
5809:
5801:
5793:
5785:
5777:
5775:Modele 1935A
5740:Splitterring
5715:Nebelpatrone
5632:Sturmpistole
5612:Kampfpistole
5594:12 cm GrW 42
5505:Faustpatrone
5419:Machine guns
5270:Volkspistole
5260:Sturmpistole
5234:
5214:World War II
5121:
5114:
5106:
5099:
5074:
5067:
5027:Machine guns
4951:Dreyse M1907
4931:Luger pistol
4930:
4873:
4795:
4789:
4783:
4777:
4771:
4765:
4759:
4753:
4729:
4701:
4680:
4672:Bibliography
4658:. Retrieved
4637:
4628:
4618:
4609:
4600:
4591:
4581:
4569:. Retrieved
4557:
4548:
4539:
4530:
4518:. Retrieved
4514:the original
4509:
4500:
4481:
4475:
4466:
4460:
4448:
4436:. Retrieved
4432:the original
4422:
4410:. Retrieved
4398:
4389:
4378:, retrieved
4373:
4367:
4355:. Retrieved
4351:
4342:
4331:, retrieved
4309:
4300:
4288:. Retrieved
4284:the original
4274:
4262:. Retrieved
4258:
4226:
4222:
4216:
4197:
4192:
4186:
4169:
4160:
4154:
4146:Google Sites
4144:– via
4138:. Retrieved
4134:the original
4123:
4107:
4102:
4083:
4077:
4068:
4056:. Retrieved
4052:
4014:. Retrieved
4010:
4000:
3989:, retrieved
3984:
3978:
3959:
3953:
3941:. Retrieved
3937:
3928:
3917:, retrieved
3912:
3906:
3887:
3867:
3861:
3849:. Retrieved
3845:
3836:
3811:
3803:
3775:
3768:
3756:. Retrieved
3752:
3743:
3724:
3718:
3706:. Retrieved
3702:
3693:
3688:(2006) p. 36
3677:
3655:. Retrieved
3651:
3642:
3630:. Retrieved
3621:
3601:
3594:
3575:
3553:
3547:
3535:. Retrieved
3531:
3522:
3510:. Retrieved
3505:
3496:
3465:
3460:
3450:
3445:
3429:
3424:
3414:
3409:
3401:
3397:
3388:
3368:
3364:
3348:
3343:
3331:. Retrieved
3327:
3293:
3282:
3270:. Retrieved
3266:
3233:
3227:
3216:, retrieved
3211:
3204:
3170:
3154:Rottman p.32
3150:
3145:Rottman p.49
3141:
3129:. Retrieved
3114:
3092:
3054:
3049:
3024:
3016:
3000:
2974:
2969:
2961:
2928:
2918:
2910:
2905:
2886:
2880:
2869:, retrieved
2864:
2858:
2825:
2813:
2801:
2748:the original
2744:rennlist.com
2743:
2734:
2726:the original
2719:
2709:
2701:the original
2691:
2683:
2678:
2670:
2644:. Retrieved
2640:
2613:
2601:
2589:
2577:
2565:
2508:
2496:. Retrieved
2492:
2483:
2464:
2458:
2446:. Retrieved
2442:
2417:
2398:
2394:
2384:
2378:
2357:
2353:
2349:
2341:
2337:
2332:, data from
2327:
2323:
2312:1500 to 1850
2311:
2307:
2302:, p. 4.
2295:
2269:
2259:
2251:
2246:
2216:
2158:Nambu pistol
1984:
1960:Soviet Union
1690:Volkspolizei
1686:East Germany
1673:Nazi Germany
1390:
1385:
1368:
1359:
1352:
1338:
1329:
1327:
1313:
1304:
1295:
1291:
1283:
1281:
1276:
1269:
1265:
1262:Neues Modell
1261:
1257:
1255:
1250:Neues Modell
1249:
1248:Model 1906 (
1241:
1231:
1211:
1198:Modell 06/29
1197:
1195:
1186:
1183:Pistole 1900
1182:
1176:
1163:
1153:
1148:
1134:
1103:
1101:
1097:
1093:Volkspolizei
1090:
1081:
1073:
1045:
1041:
1034:
1031:World War II
1017:
1009:
1004:
999:
993:
988:
985:
959:
931:'snail drum'
920:
916:
905:
872:Volkspolizei
868:East Germany
860:
840:machine guns
821:
813:
797:
791:
784:
771:
744:
732:
714:Pistole 1904
713:
709:
694:
658:
636:
634:
629:Volkspolizei
627:
621:
607:
603:
598:
593:
589:
583:
579:
569:
560:
556:
552:
548:
544:
542:
440: length
334:Manufacturer
296:The Troubles
260:Algerian War
235:World War II
119:
115:Used by
62:
43:
6082:13.2×92mmSR
5584:8 cm GrW 34
5515:Panzerfaust
5389:MP 38/MP 40
5374:MP 18/MP 28
5240:Walther P38
4984:Gewehr 1888
4915:World War I
4438:30 December
4412:30 December
4357:16 December
4290:29 December
4140:13 December
3991:6 September
3758:19 December
3708:18 December
3333:12 December
3272:6 September
3218:12 February
3011:(2006) p. 6
2646:6 September
1987:Switzerland
1860:New Zealand
1842:Netherlands
1365:Luger rifle
1339:Stoßtruppen
1236:in 1904 in
1173:Swiss Luger
1112:Vietnam War
1037:Walther P38
975:Elmer Keith
863:Walther P38
824:World War I
729:U.S. trials
641:telegraphic
617:Walther P38
611:in caliber
572:Georg Luger
537:Iron sights
408: built
367:Vickers Ltd
320:Georg Luger
270:Vietnam War
170:Warlord Era
165:World War I
155:Balkan Wars
6319:Categories
6239:Sampo L-41
6186:Lahti L-36
6144:Lahti L-35
6014:M1 carbine
5967:Sl.-Gewehr
5955:Sl.-Gewehr
5933:748-750(e)
5255:Mauser HSc
5230:Mauser C96
5167:13.2mm TuF
5157:10.6×25mmR
5134:Cartridges
4941:Mauser C96
4453:Grant 2018
4380:22 January
4207:8290545169
3489:Grant 2018
3474:1851094709
3357:0231106505
3197:Grant 2018
3063:0521472385
2938:1586637622
2851:Grant 2018
2830:Grant 2018
2818:Grant 2018
2806:Grant 2018
2794:Grant 2018
2779:Grant 2018
2764:Grant 2018
2682:Appendix,
2641:Gun Digest
2618:Grant 2018
2606:Grant 2018
2594:Grant 2018
2582:Grant 2018
2570:Grant 2018
2558:Grant 2018
2543:Grant 2018
2528:Grant 2018
2513:Grant 2018
2300:Grant 2018
2288:Grant 2018
2174:References
2153:Lahti L-35
2029:: used by
1733:. General
1549:: Used by
1335:spin drift
1292:Pistole 08
1266:New Models
1242:Pistole 04
1217:Navy model
1208:Model 1902
1179:Swiss Army
1154:Model 1902
1149:Model 1900
1077:parkerized
1066:Post-war,
948:Production
927:Mauser C96
804:Shreveport
747:Colt M1900
681:Mauser C96
637:Parabellum
606:Pistole 08
6149:Luger M23
6137:Side-arms
6087:20×138mmB
5962:M1 Garand
5927:MK I-III
5913:ZB vz. 26
5849:Lewis gun
5569:Infantry
5560:Zf.Ger.38
5500:MG 35/36A
5351:StG 45(M)
5336:MKb 42(H)
5332:MKb 42(W)
5302:Gewehr 41
5250:Sauer 38H
4979:Gewehr 98
4730:The Luger
4721:650113182
4610:AP Images
4571:6 October
4566:0307-1235
3943:2 January
3919:2 January
3868:The Luger
3795:842879929
2498:25 August
2346:Macmillan
2324:1851-1882
2179:Citations
2117:Viet Cong
1888:Palestine
1815:Luxemburg
1802:Lithuania
1723:Indonesia
1464:Chaco War
1428:Australia
1270:New Model
1258:New Model
1167:Borchardt
1018:In 1930,
635:The name
561:Luger P08
466:Cartridge
411:3,000,000
400:1900–1953
225:Chaco War
64:Wehrmacht
6029:760/2(r)
5920:146/1(j)
5896:154/2(p)
5642:Grenades
5555:VMG 1927
5470:MG 39 Rh
5404:Erma EMP
5284:carbines
5222:Sidearms
5060:Grenades
5040:MG 08/15
4923:Sidearms
4848:Archived
4821:in parts
4819:Luger 08
4660:12 March
4651:Archived
4520:12 March
4259:Handguns
4026:cite web
3476:, p. 178
3290:(1990).
2871:6 August
2254:, Osprey
2147:See also
2014:Thailand
1906:Portugal
1735:Sudirman
1603:and the
1118:Variants
1025:Bakelite
936:for the
934:magazine
846:and the
685:SIG P210
397:Produced
386:35
326:Designed
316:Designer
6206:KP m/44
5986:Bazooka
5874:Kulomet
5807:PPSh-41
5767:weapons
5571:mortars
5399:MP 3008
5297:G 98/40
5210:weapons
5152:.32 ACP
5045:MG 15nA
3657:10 July
3537:16 June
3512:27 July
3131:2 March
2962:Sixguns
2686:, p. 89
2493:iwm.com
2367:archive
1920:Romania
1710:Grenada
1634:Germany
1597:Finland
1460:Bolivia
1446:Austria
1410:Algeria
1354:Carbine
1240:as the
775:.45 ACP
761:lacked
708:as the
655:History
6304:Puukko
6159:Rifles
5993:788(a)
5981:770(p)
5969:251(a)
5957:259(r)
5950:SVT-40
5945:719(r)
5908:738(i)
5890:(BAR)
5876:vz. 37
5868:138(e)
5856:137(e)
5841:vz. 33
5830:vz. 24
5814:717(r)
5495:IMG 28
5490:MG 131
5409:EMP 44
5356:VG 1-5
5280:Rifles
5050:Madsen
4971:Rifles
4911:German
4736:
4719:
4709:
4688:
4564:
4488:
4333:4 July
4324:
4264:12 May
4233:
4204:
4114:
4090:
4058:4 July
4016:4 July
3966:
3894:
3824:
3793:
3783:
3731:
3684:
3632:5 July
3609:
3582:
3472:
3436:
3355:
3302:
3240:
3177:
3122:
3061:
3037:
3007:
2935:
2893:
2471:
2448:12 May
2041:
2024:
2011:
2001:Turkey
1998:
1974:Sweden
1971:
1957:
1944:
1930:
1917:
1903:
1890:: the
1885:
1874:Norway
1871:
1857:
1839:
1829:Mexico
1826:
1812:
1799:
1786:
1775:Latvia
1772:
1746:
1720:
1707:
1683:
1670:
1657:
1644:
1631:
1620:France
1617:
1601:Jägers
1594:
1576:
1562:
1544:
1530:
1516:
1502:
1491:Canada
1488:
1477:Brazil
1474:
1457:
1443:
1425:
1407:
1375:action
1158:9×19mm
1020:Mauser
929:. The
755:Mauser
716:. The
534:Sights
489:Action
438:Barrel
429:Length
390:(1943)
362:Mauser
352:Simson
347:Erfurt
6272:Other
5839:Puška
5828:Puška
5799:M1911
5485:MG 81
5480:MG 45
5475:MG 42
5465:MG 34
5460:MG 30
5455:MG 26
5450:MG 17
5445:MG 15
5440:MG 13
5430:MG 08
5394:MP 41
5379:MP 34
5292:FG 42
5235:Luger
5117:M.16.
5035:MG 08
5017:MP 18
4654:(PDF)
4647:(PDF)
4225:[
4196:[
4178:(PDF)
3851:4 May
1947:Spain
1789:Libya
1694:Stasi
1505:Chile
1396:Users
1347:MP 18
989:Luger
938:MP 18
912:M1911
908:slide
848:MP 18
828:stock
557:Luger
121:Users
6161:and
5991:RPzB
5925:Sten
5918:leMG
5894:leMG
5881:leMG
5866:leMG
5854:leMG
5421:and
5384:MP35
5282:and
4734:ISBN
4717:OCLC
4707:ISBN
4686:ISBN
4662:2015
4573:2022
4562:ISSN
4522:2015
4486:ISBN
4440:2022
4414:2022
4382:2024
4359:2022
4335:2023
4322:ISBN
4292:2022
4266:2017
4231:ISBN
4202:ISBN
4142:2017
4112:ISBN
4088:ISBN
4060:2023
4032:link
4018:2023
3993:2023
3964:ISBN
3945:2024
3921:2024
3892:ISBN
3853:2021
3822:ISBN
3791:OCLC
3781:ISBN
3760:2022
3729:ISBN
3710:2022
3682:ISBN
3659:2023
3634:2023
3607:ISBN
3580:ISBN
3539:2023
3514:2020
3470:ISBN
3434:ISBN
3353:ISBN
3335:2017
3300:ISBN
3274:2017
3238:ISBN
3220:2019
3175:ISBN
3133:2010
3120:ISBN
3059:ISBN
3035:ISBN
3005:ISBN
2933:ISBN
2891:ISBN
2873:2019
2648:2017
2500:2021
2469:ISBN
2450:2017
2369:and
2358:1883
2334:OECD
1692:and
1305:The
1296:P.08
1294:(or
1068:Erma
1005:m/23
963:sear
718:Army
679:and
543:The
421:Mass
374:Bern
329:1898
128:Wars
118:See
73:Type
6025:as
5989:as
5979:PzB
5977:as
5965:as
5953:as
5941:as
5929:as
5916:as
5904:as
5892:as
5879:as
5864:as
5852:as
5810:as
5341:Spz
5212:of
4403:doi
4314:doi
4306:"L"
790:'s
700:to
559:or
547:or
406:No.
6321::
6027:MP
5943:MP
5931:MP
5906:MP
5812:MP
5334:/
4715:.
4649:.
4627:.
4608:.
4590:.
4560:.
4556:.
4508:.
4401:.
4397:.
4350:.
4320:,
4308:,
4257:.
4245:^
4051:.
4040:^
4028:}}
4024:{{
4009:.
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3876:^
3844:.
3820:.
3818:21
3789:.
3751:.
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3481:^
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3070:^
3033:.
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2927:.
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4694:.
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