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  2. Jarmann M1884 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jarmann_M1884

    The Jarmann M1884 is a Norwegian bolt-action repeating rifle designed in 1878 adopted in 1884. [1] The Jarmann's adoption, and subsequent modifications, turned the Norwegian Army from a fighting force armed with single-shot black-powder weapons into a force armed with modern repeating weapons firing smokeless ammunition.

  3. List of bolt-action rifles - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_bolt-action_rifles

    IOF .30-06 sporting rifle.30-06 Springfield: 2007 India: IOF .315 sporting rifle: 8mm BSA (8x50mmR Mannlicher) 1956 India: Ishapore 2A1 rifle: 7.62x51mm NATO: 1962 India: Jungle carbine.303 British: 1944 United Kingdom: K31: 7.5×55mm Swiss: 1933 Switzerland: Karabiner 98k: 7.92×57mm Mauser: 1935 Nazi Germany: Krag–Jørgensen: 6.5×55mm.30 ...

  4. M1871 Beaumont - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/M1871_Beaumont

    A stopgap measure, the upgraded rifles were made obsolete as the main service rifle in 1895 by the Steyr Geweer M. 95 using a smokeless cartridge. Beaumont rifles were then sent to militia units and remained in service until 1907. The rifles, many of which were shortened, were sent to the Dutch East Indies and remained in use until World War II ...

  5. Mannlicher M1893 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mannlicher_M1893

    The Mannlicher M1893 (or M93) is a bolt-action rifle that was the standard service rifle of the Kingdom of Romania from 1893 to 1938. [1] The rifle and its 1892 predecessor were the first repeating rifles to be widely issued in the Romanian military. [2] It was later replaced by the Czechoslovak-designed Vz. 24 as the standard service rifle. [3]

  6. Mauser Model 1871 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mauser_Model_1871

    11-mm Mauser is the service rifle of the Martian Army in The Sirens of Titan by Kurt Vonnegut. [39] However, the book states these were bought as surplus from the Spanish–American War, which would in fact make them Model 1893 7×57mm Mauser. In the film The Last Samurai, the Japanese Imperial Army carries German bolt-action Mauser M1871/84 ...

  7. Bolt action - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bolt_action

    The French Army adopted its first bolt-action rifle, the Chassepot rifle, in 1866 and followed with the metallic cartridge bolt-action Gras rifle in 1874. European armies continued to develop bolt-action rifles through the latter half of the 19th century, first adopting tubular magazines as on the Kropatschek rifle and the Lebel rifle.

  8. MKE JNG-90 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/MKE_JNG-90

    MKE JNG-90 is a bolt-action sniper rifle that fires the 7.62×51mm NATO round used by the Turkish military. Development of the weapon first started back in 2004 [ 2 ] to 2008. [ 3 ] Its nickname is Bora [ 3 ] and it is currently being offered for export.

  9. Service rifle - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Service_rifle

    By the beginning of World War I, all of the world's major powers had adopted repeating bolt-action rifles, such as the British Lee–Enfield, the German Gewehr 98, and the Russian Mosin–Nagant. During the Second World War , the United States adopted the M1 Garand , which was the first widely adopted semi-automatic rifle that was brought into ...