1914 german mauser rifle
As for the 'butcher blade', in practice this would not have caused any more severe a wound than the smooth S98/05. Any advantage in terms of rifle technology, therefore, was with the ten-round magazine capacity and rapid action of the SMLE. As a result, whilst it forced the BEF into fighting retreat, it suffered disproportionately heavy casualties against the less accurate Lee-Enfield rifle in these early battles. The much smaller British Expeditionary Force had recent combat experience in South Africa and the North West Frontier (present-day Afghanistan). Though very large and well-equipped, the German army lacked experience of modern warfare. The robust, reliable, powerful and accurate Mauser had excelled against the British in the hands of Boer guerrillas, but did not provide an edge in 1914. They were actually intended for issue to pioneer and engineer troops who might have a need to cut wood. In fact, bayonet blades with serrated backs had been commonly used for more than a century by both Britain and Germany. This was demonised in British propaganda as the 'butcher blade', implied to have been designed to cause needlessly horrific wounds. Yet the most famous today is the 'saw-back' variant of the S98/05 sword bayonet. A range of bayonets were issued for the G98, the most common being the S84/98 with 25.3 cm (10") blade. The 7.92mm round was also powerful enough to project the special armour-piercing 'K' bullet through the side of the early British tanks. 303, this was a truly modern design with an aerodynamically shaped 'boat' tail.
Germany was first to introduce the pointed 'spitzer' (spire-shaped) or 'S' bullet. The rifle's ammunition was designed for the Gewehr 88, an otherwise unsuccessful German military rifle not part of the Mauser family.
#1914 GERMAN MAUSER RIFLE SERIES#
The ultimate variant was the Gewehr 98, the culmination of commercially successful series of rifles that began with the Model 93 sold to Spain in 1893. The Prussian army adopted the original single-shot bolt-action Mauser immediately after the Franco-Prussian War, and this was developed by the Mauser brothers Peter Paul and Wilhelm into what became a world standard rifle, rather like the Kalashnikov today. This bitter rivalry was reflected in a small arms race between the two nations. German fear of civilian insurgency was the cause of the brutality in Belgium and France, and France for her part sought revenge for her defeat. Prussia and France had clashed in 1870, and the cultural memory of that war was strong throughout the First World War. The German tradition of bolt-action rifles was second only to that of the French.