It may not even fit an 1891 Mauser. Bolts are not a "drop in" part- they may require fitting (headspacing) to that individual rifle. That is where a gunsmith earns his pay.
More information is necessary. If the rifle has a 4-lug bolt head, it is the same as a Mossberg 810. Research the 810 for info on this rifle. It may be made on FN Mauser 98 actions, in which case it will be like any other Mauser 98 sporter. Otherwise, it will be German made by Heym and is either the same as a Mauser 2000 or Mauser 3000 action. The scope, on the other hand, is almost impossible to describe these days. It will likely have Japanese optics.
I don't think you have a Mauser - the flaming cannon ball is a US Ordnance marking, and both the M1903 Springfield and M1917 bear very close resemblance to the Mauser (both share a lot of their lineage with the Mauser). If it's either of these, it would be chambered in .30-06. However, these are not the only rifles to bear that marking. Feel free to send me photos (my email address is in my profile), and I can tell you more from those.
France invented the first production smokeless powder, Poudre B, in 1884. (There were experiments clear back to 1846.) I believe Mauser, in Germany, came out with a single-shot bolt-action 10 mm in 1888 that used Poudre B. Austria also produced rifles to use it the same year. France is generally credited with the first smokeless powder military rifle in the Fusil Mle 1886 M93. Known as the Lebel for short.
Provide a detailed description of all markings, finish, barrel length, finish on all parts of the rifle and type of finish on the stock.
Mauser bolt-action rifles Bicycles Blue Jeans (Levi Strauss) Bunsen Burners Contact Lenses
Primarily in the number and location of the points where the bolt locks to the reciever. The Enfield cocks on opening, the Mauser on closing. The shape of the bolt face, and the extractors are different, since the Enfield uses a rimmed cartridge, the Mauser a rimless.
no. you're an idiot
Mauser M 98
Desgin specifications.
10-1000 USD or more depending on specifics
There is no such thing as a Mauser 1819. Model numbers then were based on the year they were introduced, and the first bolt action rifle wasn't introduced until 1824. Additionally, Paul Mauser - who founded the company - wasn't even born until 1838.
Mauser for one.
The link at the bottom of this page will take you to a good site on military surplus firearms, including assembly and disassembly of the Mauser rifle. Your bolt MAY need to be cocked.
Not every single mauser bolt is interchangable, but most bolts for a single model will be. For example, most bolts from the millions of WWII era kar-98k's are interchangable but will not be interchangable will a modern mauser hunting rifle or a modern rifle based off of the mauser action.
There have been a few. The most common is likely the Spanish Mauser.
100-1000 or more depending on specifics
it would have been his trusty 8mm bolt action mauser