Sort of. They never manufactured the Mauser under license, but the Pattern 14 Enfield rifle was essentially an unabashed and slightly modified copy of the Mauser Gewehr 98, chambered in the British 7.7x56R/.303 cartridge, with a good portion of these rifles being manufactured in the US under contract.
This same rifle was reworked to accept the US 7.62x63/.30-06 cartridge, and pressed into US service as the M1917 rifle, of which more were actually manufactured than the Springfield 1903.
Need a specific model. Mauser has a very long history and continues to make firearms, not to mention the number of rifles based on the Mauser G98 action which are referred to as "Mausers", although most of them weren't made with any licensing from Mauser.
No. No one can. There are a lot of custom rifle makers and major gun makers that make rifles chambered in 7x57
As far as I know browning did not have any firearms made for them in australia.
US- 1903 Springfield Canada- Ross Britain- SMLE Germany- K98 Mauser France- Lebel Russia- Moisin Nagant Japan- Arisaka There were MANY others- these were than most common.
Yes.
they did at one time
long rifles rifles and hand guns
Most partisan forces seldom have a single source of arms and must make do with whatever they can acquire. The various partisans in Yugoslavia were variously armed with a mix of Pre-War Yugoslavian rifles from Pre-First World War Serbian, Mexican and Turkish sources, all converted to fire a 7.9 x 57mm cartridge, and two sets of rifles from Belgian and Czech sources that were ordered in the 1920s and '30s. Most of these had a Mauser-type action. Captured firearms from Bulgarian, German, Hungarian and Italian sources were common as well; perhaps with the Mauser Kar-98 being the most popular because of its reliability and the availability of stocks from Bosnian, Croatian and Albanian units that had been armed by the Germans. Italian rifles would have been widely available after Italian surrender in September 1943. Increasingly in 1944, both the Western Allies and the Soviets were in a position to offer a third source of rifles -- further complicating an already byzantine supply situation. Interestingly, the most common rifles in partisan hands must have been the M1922 FN produced rifles and Mauser Kar-98s, as both were still provided with ammunition and refurbishment by Yugoslavian arms factories in the immediate aftermath of the Second World War.
The Mauser rifles manufactured by Carl Gustav had the year of manufacture on the top of the chamber, under the manufacturer's roll mark. If this is faded on your rifle, examination with a magnifying glass or the use of a product like White Out may be necessary to make these markings legible. If this does not work for you, you can go to www.surplusrifle.com, and additional resources there or people affiliated with that website may be able to provide you with assistance.
Yes
No
You get what you pay for.