A Kropatschek is any variant of a rifle designed by Alfred von Kropatschek. Kropatschek's rifles used a tubular magazine (constructed of nickel-plated steel) of his design, of the same type used in the Japanese Murata Type 22 and the German Mauser Gewehr 1871/84. While designed for black powder, the Kropatschek action proved to be strong enough to handle smokeless powder.
The Kropatschek was the basis for the French Lebel M1886.[11]
Variants
- Gendarmerie Repetier-Karabiner M1881: 11 mm Gendarmerie Carbine (also known as M1874/81);
- Kropatschek Torpedo Boats Gewehr M1893: 8 mm Navy Rifle for Torpedo boat crews.
France:
- Fusil de Marine Mle 1878: 11 mm Navy Rifle;
- Fusil d'Infanterie Mle 1884: 11 mm Infantry Rifle;
- Fusil d'Infanterie Mle 1885: 11 mm Infantry Rifle.
Portugal:
- Espingarda de Infantaria 8 mm m/1886: 8 mm Infantry Rifle;
- Carabina de Caçadores 8 mm m/1886: 8 mm Light Infantry Carbine;
- Carabina de Cavalaria 8 mm m/1886: 8 mm Cavalry Carbine;
- Carabina da Guarda Fiscal 8 mm m/1886/88: 8 mm Treasury Guard Carbine;
- Espingarda de Infantaria 8 mm m/1886/89: 8 mm Colonial Infantry Rifle;
- Carabina de Artilharia 8 mm m/1886/91: 8 mm Artillery Carbine.
Users
Austria-Hungary
Brazil:1878 Kropatschek rifle adopted by the navy in 1884; in 1891 it was replaced by the 1886 Portuguese model. During the second Revolta da Armada the army used a small number of Kropatscheks captured from navy depots. The Kropatschek was phased out in naval service in 1895 after the adoption of the 1894 Brazilian Mauser[12]
Chile: 2000 1878 Kropatschek rifles were delivered for the navy in 1881. The objective of this acquisition was to have a fast-firing weapon to repeal torpedo boats.[13]
Ethiopian Empire
French Third Republic
Kingdom of Greece: Part of French military aid during World War I.[14]
Kingdom of Portugal
Russian Empire: 150,000 Kropatscheks bought from France in 1915[15][16]
Soviet Union: taken into Soviet inventory following the Russian Civil War; most were shipped to Republican forces during the Spanish Civil War [16]
Kingdom of Spain: 746 M1878 Kropatschek rifles procured from OEWG.[14]
Spanish Republic:1,821 surplus 1878 Kropatschek rifles delivered by the Soviet Union[16]
Wassoulou Empire: The Wassoulou Empire arms industry created functional copies of the Krophatschek rifle in the 1880s and 90s to use in their struggle against French colonial forces.[17]
See also
References
- Esposito, Gabriele, Armies of the War of the Pacific 1879-83: Osprey Publishing (2016)
- McCollum, Ian (2019). Chassepot to Famas: French Military Rifles 1866-2016. Headstamp Publishing. ISBN 978-1733424608.
- de Abreu, Jorge, A Revolução Portugueza: O 31 de Janeiro (Porto 1891) (2009)
- "O EXÉRCITO REPUBLICANO" (PDF).
- McLachlan, Sean (20 Sep 2011). Armies of the Adowa Campaign 1896: The Italian Disaster in Ethiopia. Men-at-Arms 471. Osprey Publishing. pp. 35–36. ISBN 9781849084574.
- "History of WWI Primer 083: The Kropatschek Pt.2 Documentary". YouTube.
- VILLELA Jr, M E C. CANUDOS: memórias de um combatente. 2 ed. Rio de Janeiro: EdUERJ, 1997. p. 107.
- Gunter, Janet (2007). "'Communal Conflict in Viqueque and the 'Charged' History of '59'". The Asia Pacific Journal of Anthropology. 8: 27–41. CiteSeerX 10.1.1.562.4135. doi:10.1080/14442210601177977.
- 8x56 R Kropatschek Short - MUNICION.org (spanish)
- 8x60 R Guedes - Kropatschek - MUNICION.org (spanish)
- "French Rifle Ammunition: 8mm Lebel and 7.5mm French". 7 August 2017.
- "ArmasBrasil - Carabina Kropatschek". Archived from the original on 15 April 2023. Retrieved 22 March 2025.
{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: bot: original URL status unknown (link) - "Armas de Fuego y Municiones". 24 March 2017. Archived from the original on 24 March 2017. Retrieved 22 March 2025.
- "M1878 French Naval Kropatschek (Fusil de Marine M1878)". MilitaryRifles.com. Retrieved 28 March 2025.
- "Scraping the bottom of the barrel blackpowder rifles of the great war part 1".
- "Foreign Rifles of the Spanish Republic, 1936-1939".
- Bocoum, Hamady (2001). "SAMORI' S SMITHIES: FROM CRAFT PRODUCTION TO ATTEMPTED MANUFACTURING, OR A DRAFT PLAN FOR TECHNOLOGICAL INDEPENDENCE". Mande Studies. 3: 55–63.
External links
- French 1878 Marine Kropatschek Forgotten Weapons