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Adventures in Surplus: An M91 Mosin of Many Flags

http://www.patreon.com/ForgottenWeapons https://www.floatplane.com/channel/ForgottenWeapons/home Cool Forgotten Weapons merch! http://shop.forgottenweapons.com Today we are taking a look at an early production M1891 Mosin Nagant rifle. This one has had quite a busy history...it was originally manufactured at the Izhevsk Arsenal in 1894, with several of the features of a very early M91 (like the palm rest on the trigger guard and the sling swivel on the front of the magazine). It served in the Russian Army in World War One until is was captured by German forces. It was put back into service by the Germans, stamped with a "Deutches Reich" marking on the stock and fitted with an adapter to mount a German bayonet. However, it then was recaptured by the Russians, and sent to Finland with a Russian soldier. When Finland declared independence, it was taken by a Finnish soldier, and used during the Finnish Civil War. After that it got a bit of a break, though - it was not turned over to the Finish Army, and instead remained in private hands through the Winter War and Continuation War. In fact, it remained in the family of the original Civil War soldier until a few decades ago, when it was given to the collector who now owns it. Contact: Forgotten Weapons 6281 N. Oracle 36270 Tucson, AZ 85740

Comments

Anonymous

Beautiful early mosin! For its journey from German ownership to Finnish, wouldn't it be more likely that it was sold by Germany to the newly formed nation of Finland? Someone can correct me but I believe that something like 200k Mosins were sold to Finland after WWI from Germany and Austria. Or does the lack of Finnish Army/Civil Guard marks negate this? Since if it was sold by Germany to another nation, it would likely have acceptance marks of the receiving nations military?

Anonymous

I have a similar mosin; an 1896 Imperial Tula with German Deutsches Reich mark in the stock, but mine has some of the Finnish modifications and markings

ForgottenWeapons

It theoretically could have been sold directly from Germany to Finland, but given the known Civil War provenance, I think it's more likely that it went form Russia to Finland. Seems to me like it would have been in Finland too early to be a German sale.

Joseph W Cupp

Loving Adventures in Surplus, more please!

Anonymous

Great video and content (as always). Keep the adventures in surplus coming Ian! Hi from Chicago.

Guido Schriewer

poor ol' rod... loooong life so many people caring not enough for ya.... has been around, EH. did the fritz produce ammo for those or did they hoped for captured supply?

Mick Gillen

My Finnish M91/30 is on an 1896 Tula action but with a Tikkakoski1944 barrel and wartime jointed stock with Finnish sling mounts and loops. The action still has the Tsar Nicolas II crest. Assembled post WW2 as far as I could find out when I bought it. Shoots like a dream. Numbered 67207 with the army SA t and the Tikkakoski T in the triangle. Bolt is stamped the with the same number.

Anonymous

Love the well travelled as well Ian. Thanks for sharing

Anonymous

It turned out that an M39 I bought, after removing the stock, had Chatellerault markings on the bottom of the receiver. That was an awesome find, and puts that receiver in a lot of places over its lifetime.

Anonymous

This reminds me of a certain Mauser that I found for sale on a Polish website. It started off as a kbk wz. 29 receiver, which was then shipped to Steyr to be finished as a Gewehr 29/40, sent to a unit in Norway, captured by the Norwegians after the war, refurbished and modified to a K98k F1 standard and rechambered for .30-06. Fascinating stuff.

Anonymous

Wow! That is an incredible history. If I ever owned a World War One bolt action, I'd want it to have a story like that.