The military luger was used in WW1 and WW2. The dates on top of luger would indicate year made. Germany also made lugers for the commercial trade.
To my knowledge there are no records pertaing to who any one luger was issued to. However, lugers were made by a few different companies. i.e, DWM, Efurt, Simpson, Vickers, Suhl................
The Luger was a standard issue sidearm in WW1. The P-38 pistol replaced it in WW2.
Most likely a Luger 9mm. it MIGHT have been a luger, not likely though because they replaced that with the walther p38 9mm pistol, i know he atleast had that because theres a picture of him somewhere i saw. He was walking with one of his generals and inspecting the army. you can see under his nazi suit and jacket a holster on his belt with a walther p38. believe it or not, there was a record somewhere where he personally went to russia and may have shot 1 or 2 russians himself with it.
Most likely it would of been a caliber, probably a 32 PPK but him and Eva did it together.
I've got a listing for a Luger Krieghoff 1936-1945Same specifications as Luger Krieghoff 36, except 1936-45 dated chamber, bbl. proofs. Est. 8600 production.$1950.00 WWII CollectiblesTry to find the latest edition of the Blue Book of Gun Values updated each year. Try your local library. Remember condition isn't everything its the only thing. A "P38" and a "Lugar" are two different semi-auto 9mm pistols produced by Germany during the 1st half of the 20th century. The Lugar was standard issue in the Germany Army in WWI and the P38 was standard issue in WWII. Both used the same ammunition.Addition:The 9 x 19 mm cartridge fired by both the P38 and P08 (Luger) is popularly referred to as the 9mm Luger. The writer above is correct about the German military issue. However, the P38 is still manufactured by Walther, and is the current military sidearm of 9 countries. $500 to $700 us dollors less in Canada $400 to $600 these pistols were mainly bring backs from ww2.
That would be the South African national team. There is really no need for any team to be designated home. Determining kit color is a minor issue and a coin flip should be truly random in any event.
The Luger was a standard issue sidearm in WW1. The P-38 pistol replaced it in WW2.
Luger 9mm pistol
value depends on overall condition
In the case of a collectable firearm, value is driven by condition. A small difference in the degree of wear can make a major difference in value- and your Luger may be worth anywhere from $500 to $3,500. I'm sorry, but you will need a "hands-on" appraisal to get an accurate value.
German use of Zeppelins.
ww1 Britain standard issue was a Lee Enfield and German was a Gewehr 98 WW2 Britain standard issue was a new version of the Lee Enfield and German was a Karabiner 98K
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For an infantryman with standard issue equipment, they would generally carry a 9mm Luger and a Mauser rifle (Karabiner 98k), a bolt action rifle that held 5 cartridges at a time, while the Luger, I am not sure but most 9mm vary from 5 to 30 cartridges.Another gun that was used was the MP40 submachine gun, along with the MP43.The MG42 was also used as a light weight machine gun.The Germans were also issued Mauser bayonets and Steilhandgrenates, or German grenades.
Most likely a Luger 9mm. it MIGHT have been a luger, not likely though because they replaced that with the walther p38 9mm pistol, i know he atleast had that because theres a picture of him somewhere i saw. He was walking with one of his generals and inspecting the army. you can see under his nazi suit and jacket a holster on his belt with a walther p38. believe it or not, there was a record somewhere where he personally went to russia and may have shot 1 or 2 russians himself with it.
Most likely it would of been a caliber, probably a 32 PPK but him and Eva did it together.
Edmond Ranolph