Item Description
Original Item: Only One Available. Adopted in 1888 the new German Infantry round in 7.92 X 57mm replaced the old 10.4mm large bore cartridge adopted in 1871. The M-1888 Rifle was referred to as the "Commission Rifle" and was manufactured as a full Infantry Rifle and a Carbine starting in 1888 and an Artillery Carbine adopted in 1891.
Our example is of the Cavalry Carbine is marked over the chamber with (CROWN) / ERFURT. / 1894., for 1894 manufacture at the Imperial Erfurt Arsenal, located in Thuringia. The right side of the receiver is marked with Kar. 88. / n.m. in German blackface type, short for Karabiner 88 / neues material. This indicates that the carbine had a "New Material" barrel installed at some point inside the barrel jacket. The 1888 Commission rifles and carbines were made during a time of very fast development in small arms ammunition, and almost all in service were subject to successive modifications to keep up, just as the British Lee-Series rifles had been. The barrel jacket, receiver, and magazine housing are marked with matching serial number 9437 / a, with shortened number 37 on smaller components such as the barrel band and nose cap. The bolt was replaced at arsenal, marked with serial number 1771. It has the correct turned down handle for a carbine.
The stock is in very good service used condition, and actually has a some lovely "Tiger Flame" figuring to the butt stock. It definitely shows a good amount of use, and was cleaned and refinished, which has made the original stock cartouches faint. It is currently finished with some type of hand rubbed varnish or wax, and looks great. The metalwork has a lovely service used look, with the original finish on the barrel jacket and magazine worn down to a light gray patina. The receiver and bolt, originally bright steel, now show light oxidation staining, but no major pit rust.
The carbine has an 18" barrel which still has a great bore, showing a bright finish with clear lands and grooves. It shows just a bit of rounding on the lands, in line with light to moderate service, which would be right in line with it having been replaced during the late 19th or early 20th century. The action cycles well, though it can be a bit stiff when cocking, and it has a crisp dry fire. The firing pin is fully intact, as is the often lost cartridge ejector on the bolt face. The "wing" safety on the back of the bolt is a bit stiff, but fully functional. There is an S marked over the chamber to indicate modification for the S-PATRONE cartridge introduced in 1903 (we do not recommend firing the S-cartridge in this carbine). There is also a small dot / Z above this, which research indicates means the barrel jacket has reinforced solder. This short carbine was intended for use by cavalry units.
The lower barrel band has a great regimental marking: 6. K. 4. 92., for the 6th (Brandenburg) Cuirassier Regiment “Emperor Nicholas I of Russia” (Kürassier-Regiment "Kaiser Nikolaus von Russland" (Brandenburg) Nr. 6"), 4th Squadron (Eskadron), Weapon (Waffen) #92. This was a Heavy Cavalry regiment of the Prussian and later Imperial German army. It was a very old regiment, with roots going back to December 1691. The modern regiment was formed in 1807, and garrisoned in Brandenburg. It fought during the War of the Sixth Coalition, the Second Schleswig War, the Austro-Prussian War, the Franco-Prussian War, and World War I as part of the III Army Corps. It had been renamed after Czar Nicholas of Russia around the turn of the century. This is the exact type of unit that would have been issued this type of carbine.
In 1890 this was cutting edge technology as the Gewehr 1888 rifles and carbines were the first to use the 7.92mm cartridge that replaced the 10.4mm used in the Mauser 1871/84 tubular magazine rifles.
This little carbine used an integral 5 shot box magazine and was extremely popular. It was superseded in 1898 with the introduction of the Gew 98 rifle also in an updated version of the same caliber and many 88s were updated and then marked with a small "S" on the receiver ring to indicate it could be used with the upgraded ammunition.
Both the Kar 88 and 91 were already being slowly taken out of service before World War One, as the new Mauser 98 pattern carbines introduced in 1909 or 1910 were taking their place. This would change with the outbreak of war, of course, and every one of the 88 / 91 pattern carbines in German inventory would be re-issued during the Great War. Their size and weight made them ideal for the troops who needed a personal weapon but were unlikely to actually have to fight with it (artillery crews, cyclists, supply drivers, balloon crews, etc).
Both the "Commission" Model 88 and Mauser Model 98 rifles and carbines saw extensive use in WWI. During the Great War cavalry was quickly becoming a thing of the past once trench warfare was introduced.
By WW2 the Germans had adopted the Mauser 98K Rifle, again in the improved 7.92mm caliber, this rifle was shorter than the Gew 98, longer than the carbine, and became the standard.
A rare 1894 dated Regimentally Marked German Kar 88 Carbine, only 37 1/2" in overall length, federally classified as an antique due to its pre-1899 manufacture date. In lovely condition and ready to display!
Specifications-
Year of Manufacture: 1890
Caliber: 7.92×57mm Mauser S Patrone
Cartridge Type: Centerfire Cartridge
Barrel Length: 18 Inches
Overall Length: 37 1/2 Inches
Action type: Bolt-Action
Feed System: 5 round internal magazine
History of the Gewehr 88
In 1886, the French Army unveiled the Modelle 1886 "Lebel" rifle. There was an immediate reaction in German military circles bordering on hysteria. Why? Because the Lebel was the world's first small bore military rifle using an efficient smokeless powder cartridge. Now, the Lebel, which used a tubular magazine located under the barrel was not a particularly noteworthy design, but the power and flat trajectory of the new French 8mm round far outclassed the 11mm Reichspatrone black powder round used in the contemporary German infantry rifle, the Mauser 71/84.
In this rather charged atmosphere, the German Gewehr Prfungs Kommission (GPK - Rifle Testing Commission) went to work. Initially, the idea was to revise the Mauser Gewehr 71/84 to use a small caliber smokeless powder round based on the old 11mm black powder Reichspatrone. To this extent, production machinery was ordered from the Ludwig Loewe Company of Berlin-Charlottenburg in December, 1887. As things progressed, the GPK became disillusioned with this technical approach, and so a rather strange hybrid of ideas took shape.
The bolt design was highly revised by a Spandau Arsenal technician named Louis Schlegelmilch and features a separate bolt head. The ensuing rifle had a Schlegelmilch/Mauser action, a five shot clip loaded Mannlicher style magazine (note: while the clip falls out as with the Mannlicher clips, this one was markedly improved in that it could be loaded with either end down as opposed to only one end on the true Mannlicher), and a full length barrel jacket designed by Armand Mieg. The pitch and profile of the rifling were copied directly from that of the Lebel. The cartridge chosen was a modified Swiss style rimless design based on the ideas of Eduard Rubin. By March 23, 1888, the Bavarian military observer in Berlin, General von Xylander reported that the development was virtually complete.
Field trials for the new rifle were completed in November, 1888, and the GPK recommended that it be adopted immediately. The adoption orders were signed by Kaiser Wilhelm II on November 12, 1888. Issue of the Gewehr 88 as the new rife was designated, were first made in the spring of 1889 to the XV and XVI Armeekorps stationed in Elsass-Lothringen. Issue to the Bavarian military units began in October 1889, and by August 1890, all Prussian, Saxon, and Wurttemberger line units had been re-equipped.
The Gewehr 88 was made by the three primary Prussian arsenals at Danzig, Erfurt, and Spandau, a smaller Bavarian establishment at Amberg, as well as several private contractors, including the Ludwig Loewe Company, Osterreichische Waffenfabrik Gesellschaft (Steyr), and Haenel. Production figures up to the time production ceased in 1897 are as follows:
Prussian Government Arsenals: 750,000
Amberg: 425,000
Loewe: 425,000
Steyr: 300,000
Haenel: 100,000
Total: 1,675,000
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IMA considers all of our antique guns as non-firing, inoperable and/or inert. Title 18, U.S. Code, Section 921(a)(16) defines antique firearms as all guns made prior to 1899. This law exempts antique firearms from any form of gun control or special engineering because they are not legally considered firearms. No FFL, C&R or any license is required to possess, transport, sell or trade Antique guns. All rifles and muskets sold by IMA that were manufactured prior to 1899 are considered Antiques by the US BATF (United States Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco & Firearms). Therefore, all of IMA's Antique guns may be shipped to most US States and most U.S. territories.
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