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Nazi rebarrel on Yu. M1924 rifle
This is definitely a Yugoslav manufactured intermediate action model 1924 rifle. It was manufactured at Kragujevac in 1929. The stock and bolt are mismated. I gave $125 =shipping and transfer totaling $179. The seller made no mention of the German markings- in fact wasn't even sure of it's nationality and under-priced the weapon.
Anyway, I first noticed signs of German handling on it, German action screws, serial # stamped on butt plate and rear sight ladder. These are German marking practices, not Yugo. I took off the hand guard and it had the (matching, wonder of wonders!) serial number stamped in it too. Again, not a Yugoslav custom.
Then I saw the barrel had German stamps all over it. I am pretty familiar with Yugo markings but am woefully ignorant of German. The barrel is a German barrel, not Yugoslav. The Yugoslavians cut a relief for the extractor so as to let the entire cartridge case to be supported. This barrel has no such relief cut. There's a pic of each. It has a 0.2 stamp indicating a rebarrel. There seems to be some indecision about bore dia since it is stamped both "789" & "7.9." That's the little I do know. A Nazi rebarreling job? there is no Yugoslav proof on it. I don't know what a German proof looks like. But, if a Nazi capture, there is no single German marking or modification to the stock. Maybe a Partizan job?
I have had indications that the dirty bird behind the serial number is unfamiliar, unknown or doesn't look right. Faked? if so, are all the stamps faked? That's an awful lot of faked stamps. Too, where's the motivation? Kind of hard to pass this off as a German rifle when all the stamps were hidden under the hand guard. The seller obviously didn't pay a fortune for it nor begin to try to capitalize on it either.
I hope you can help me out. I have a load of pics. I'll dump what I can so you all can help me out. I got some info from one member already but want more. Remember, other than what I've mentioned, and the WWII era WaA, I don't know what any of those mean!
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If any element of an artefact has been faked, then that artefact has been falsified
Quote:
Originally Posted by
Jim
There is so much going on with this that is right that one questionable stamp doesn't signify.
... one questionable stamp doesn't signify ...
I respectfully suggest that your reasoning is erroneous. If something is mostly right, that does not prove that it is completely right. No-one has questioned that this is a Jugoslav rifle. The question is: has it been falsified. Just one fake stamp means that it has been falsified, even if everything else is 100%. That seems to be the issue.
FWIW. I cannot find a match to that incomplete marking that looks similar to a Reichsadler marking in "Handbuch Deutscher Waffenstempel auf Militär- und Diensthandwaffen 1871-2000" - 400 pages of hard facts and documentary evidence, not just a collection of opinions and hearsay. Neither can I match up the fragmentary "Fraktur" stamp on the barrel band with any stamp in the same book, which lists all identified inspectors stamps at the time of writing.
Of course, this does NOT prove that the stamps are fake. They may, for instance, be quite simply not German military stamps. And books are guidelines, not guarantees. But it does mean that until their provenance has been established, they must be regarded as suspect.
Patrick
:wave: