

The trigger loop was underslung in the usual way with a projecting magazine case featured just ahead of the trigger unit. The bolt handle held the typical knob at its end for ease of use and the assembly sat over the right side of the gun. The Model 1891 featured a single-piece wood stock with a straight-wrist grip section. On every other quality however the Argentine Mauser was essentially the Turkish variant and a Mauser long gun through and through. This included a revised bolt assembly and reinforced extractor unit while being chambered for the local 7.65x53mm Argentine Mauser cartridge. The result was adoption of the Model 1891 largely based on the Model 1890 Turkish Mauser though with subtle modifications to suit the Argentine Army requirement. From this design then came the Model 1891 "Argentine Mauser" which, like the Turkish gun, lacked the barrel jacket featured in the Belgian design - a quality ultimately found more detrimental than beneficial.Īn Argentine government commission sought to replace earlier Model 1871s in Argentine service and contracted with Mauser in 1886 to upgrade their existing stocks. The design was then adopted by the Ottoman Empire (with some modifications) to become the Model 1890 "Turkish Mauser". This form was more or less faithful to the German design but added a barrel jacket for strength. Mauser manufacturing hubs were eventually established in several other countries including Belgium which begat allows for production of the slightly altered Model 1889 "Belgian Mauser".


If a given bolt-action rifle wasn't a Mauser-based design then it held origins in the competing Austro-Hungarian Mannlicher line of gunes. Once perfected beyond their early offerings, German Mauser bolt-action rifles proliferated the firearms market of the world by the end of the 1800s and into the early 1900s.
