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Gewehr 1888

Model 1888 commission rifle / Gewehr 88
Infanteriegewehr m-1888 - Tyskland - kaliber 7,92mm - Armémuseum.jpg
Type Service rifle
Place of origin German Empire
Service history
In service 1888–1921 and 1944–1945 (Germany)
Used by See users
Wars First Sino-Japanese War
War of Canudos
Second Boer War
Boxer Rebellion
Herero Wars
Maji Maji Rebellion
World War I
Easter Rising
Russian Civil War
German Revolution of 1918–19
Revolutions and interventions in Hungary (1918–20)
Greater Poland Uprising (1918–19)
Polish–Soviet War
Irish War of Independence
Silesian Uprisings
Turkish War of Independence
Lithuanian Wars of Independence
Sheikh Said rebellion
Ararat rebellion
Chinese Civil War
Second Italo-Ethiopian War
Spanish Civil War
Dersim rebellion
Second Sino-Japanese War
Sudeten German uprising 1938
World War II
Korean War
Production history
Designer German Rifle Commission
Manufacturer Ludwig Loewe, Haenel, Steyr-Mannlicher, Imperial Arsenals of Amberg, Danzig, Erfurt, and Spandau, Hanyang Arsenal
Variants Gewehr 88/05, Gewehr 88/14, Karabiner 88, Hanyang 88 (unlicensed copy)
Specifications
Weight 3.8 kg (8.4 lb)
Length 1,245 mm (49.0 in)
Barrel length 740 mm (29.1 in)

Cartridge M/88, 7.92×57mm Mauser from Gewehr 88/05 onwards
Action bolt-action
Feed system 5 round clip in a permanent internal magazine

The Gewehr 88 (commonly called the Model 1888 commission rifle) was a late 19th-century German bolt action rifle, adopted in 1888.

The invention of smokeless powder in the late 19th century immediately rendered all of the large-bore black powder rifles then in use obsolete. To keep pace with the French (who had adopted smokeless powder "small bore" ammunition for their Lebel Model 1886 rifle) the Germans adopted the Gewehr 88 using its own new M/88 cartridge, which was also designed by the German Rifle Commission. The rifle was one of many weapons in the arms race between the Germanic states and France, and with Europe in general. There were also two carbine versions, the Karabiner 88 for mounted troops and the Gewehr 91 for artillery. Later models provided for loading with stripper clips (Gewehr 88/05s and Gewehr 88/14s) and went on to serve in World War I to a limited degree. Unlike many German service rifles before and after, it was not developed by Mauser but the arms commission, and Mauser was one of the few major arms manufacturers in Germany that did not produce Gewehr 88s.

In 1886, fifteen years after their defeat by German forces in the Franco-Prussian War, the French Army introduced the new Lebel magazine rifle firing an 8 mm high-velocity projectile propelled by the new smokeless powder. This made Germany’s rifle, the Mauser Model 1871, obsolete due to its large and slow 11 mm round propelled by black powder. The practical result was that the French rifle had greater accuracy and range, giving French troops a tactical advantage over the German Army. In response the German Army’s Rifle Testing Commission developed the Gewehr 88 which was adopted for service in 1888. For this reason the Gewehr 88 is also known as the "commission rifle," or "reichsgewehr".


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