Mauser
Mauser was a German firearms manufacturer founded in 1874 by brothers Wilhelm and Paul Mauser in Oberndorf am Neckar, specializing in bolt-action rifles and semi-automatic pistols that revolutionized military small arms design.[1][2]
The brothers, sons of a master gunsmith, began by improving existing needle-fire systems, leading to the Model 1871 infantry rifle adopted by the German Empire in 1871 as its first metallic-cartridge breechloader.[1][2] Paul Mauser (1838–1914), the principal innovator, refined bolt-action mechanisms through successive models, culminating in the Gewehr 98 of 1898, whose controlled-round-feed system and robust construction made it the standard German service rifle until 1935 and a template for global military rifles.[2][3] Millions of Gewehr 98 variants, including the Karabiner 98k, equipped German forces in both world wars, underscoring the design's enduring reliability under combat conditions.[4] Mauser's C96 "Broomhandle" pistol, introduced in 1896, pioneered semi-automatic handgun technology and saw widespread use, while the firm's licensed exports influenced armaments in over 30 countries.[2]