1891 Argentine Mauser Carbine Serial Numbers
I have for sale my 1891 Argentine Carbine Receiver marked; MAUSER MODELO ARGENTINO 1891 MANUFACTURA LOWE BERLIN Serial number is A16xx, matches on receiver, barrel, bolt, floorplate. May be matching on stock as well but the stock number is not clearly readable. Metal above the wood line is mostly bare with patina and some staining. Minor pitting at the wood line on the barrel. Blue below the wood line is approx.
80% Receiver crest is present and clear, as are all markings on carbine. Wood is very nice especially considering the age. No breaks, cracks, or repairs. Carbine is as originally issued.
Dec 11, 2012 MAUSER MODELO ARGENTINO 1891. MANUFACTURA LOWE BERLIN. Serial number is A16xx, matches on receiver, barrel, bolt, floorplate. May be matching on stock as well but the stock number is not clearly readable. Metal above the wood line is mostly bare with patina and some staining. Minor pitting at the wood line on the barrel. 1891 Carbine Mauser DWM. This rifle is chambered for 7.65 Argentine ammunition and has a shiny bore with very good rifling. The serial numbers on the bolt. Ludwig Loewe & Company 1891 Argentine Mauser. Germany actually produced the rifle in 1891 for the Argentinian military. Depending on condition. Argentine Mauser Model 1891 rifle, manufactured by Lowe, Berlin.
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Was not modified to accept bayo. Bore is very good with some wear and frost. All in all this is a nice original carbine. Note: Carbine is an antique. Looking for $275.00 plus $30.00 shipping (FTF in Washington with valid ID) First 'I'll take it' to my email gets it.
Actually the ground-off Coat of Arms was done by the Argentine military itself. A few had been sold to Chile, and some Chileans shot a few Argentinians, and were captured, and the soldiers were very upset that they were being shot at by their own guns (which at the time was the finest military rifle in the world), and so from then on all the rifles sold had their Coat of Arms ground off. Mine is the same way. The book explains all the symbols. The shaking hands for instance is a symbol of the uniting of the southern provinces. It is found in seven locations.
MB in script is the test-firing mark, and there is also a Frigian Cap, Rising Sun, Oval, Anchor, Half-Moon, Four Point Star, Buckle, Five Point Star, Cross, Flattened Oval, Triangle, a different Four Point Star, and a Circle. But too bad about the shortened barrel. Ruined for collecting purposes but still cool to own. I paid $650 for mine last year, pretty much in perfect condition, but lightly fired. Here is one that has a shortened barrel and shortened stock, and still estimated for 100-200 with matching numbers and a re-attached front sight. This auction house is very very conservative with estimates.
Most things 2x their estimates so maybe 200-400 is what it will really sell for. Might be an interesting item to watch.
Of course the pictures are small, and there are no pics of the parts we'd like to see - the shortened barrel or the coat of arms. I've been to this auction before and the pics are always like that.