German designations of foreign firearms in World War II
The German designations of foreign firearms in World War II is a list of known foreign firearms and equipment compiled by the German armed forces before World War II.
Purpose
The purpose of these lists are threefold:- Provide a list of German designations for foreign firearms.
- Correlate German weapons designations with their associated wiki pages.
- Provide a reference for captured foreign firearms in German service during WWII.
Background
Volumes | German | Content |
D.50/1 | Handwaffen | Pistols, rifles and sub-machine guns |
D.50/2 | Maschinengewehre | Light and heavy machine guns |
D.50/3 | Werfer | Mortars |
D.50/4 | Leichte Geschütze | Light artillery |
D.50/5 | Schwere Geschütze | Heavy artillery |
D.50/6 | Schwerste Geschütze | Siege and railway artillery |
D.50/12 | Kraftfahrzeuge | Vehicles |
D.50/14 | Pionieregeräte | Engineering equipment and explosives |
The format for these designations follow this pattern. The German designation of the type of firearm, model/year number or unique identification number and lastly its country code. In the first example there's a carbine and it has been assigned a unique identification number and it is French. In the second example there's a Pistol with a model/year designation and it is Austrian. In practice common model designations don't always share the same ID numbers. Because a Mauser model 98 could be produced in different countries, have different calibers and have a different model/year or unique identification number for each country. Also while a Mauser model 98 from different countries may be able to fire the same ammunition that doesn't mean their parts are compatible or interchangeable. Lastly unique numbers with / mean the weapon is a sub-variant. For a list of German military terms see Glossary of German military terms.
Type Designation | Model/Year Number | Unique Number | County Code |
Karibiner | 561 | - | |
Pistole | 12 |