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Steyr M1912
In 1911, the Austrian weapons designer Karel Krnka created a semi-auto pistol, called the Steyr M1911, which also became known as the Steyr-Hahn. At the same time, its production was established at the Österreichische Waffenfabrik Steyr arms factory (Austria). The Steyr M1911 pistol was proposed for the civilian arms market and for export. The commercial Steyr M1911 may have an adjustable rear sight and stamp "OESTERR.WAFFENFABRIK STEYR M.1911 9m/m" on the left side of the slide. According to some sources, the Steyr M1911 pistol in 1912 was adopted by the reserve units of the Austro-Hungarian army under the name Repetierpistole M12 (according to other sources - "9mm Selbstiade Pistole M.12"). When the First World War began, the army of Austria-Hungary began to experience an acute shortage of pistols. As a result, the Steyr pistol was widely ordered by Austria-Hungary, later becoming known as the Steyr M1912. The pistols were put into service with the designation "STEYR1912", which could also contain another year, depending on the year of manufacture. With the collapse of the Austro-Hungarian Empire, production of the Steyr M1912 was discontinued in 1918. It is believed that about 250000 Steyr pistols were produced. After the First World War, these pistols were in service with the armies of Poland, Hungary, Austria, Romania, Yugoslavia and Chile. After the German annexation of Austria in 1938, about 60000 pistols were adapted to fire with standard German 9x19mm Parabellum ammo. In the Wehrmacht, such pistols received the designation Pistole 12 (Ö). They can be distinguished by their "08 marks" and Nazi eagles. During the Second World War, these pistols were used by the German police and various occupation units.
In addition to the basic model Steyr M1912, in 1916 a full-auto modification of it was created and produced in small quantities, which received the designation Repetierpistole M1912/16 (Steyr M1912/16). The automatic pistol was equipped with a fire selector, and an elongated magazine with a capacity of 16 rounds (still integral, requiring two clips of 8 rounds each for loading). A wooden buttstock-holster may be attached to the pistol grip.
Specifications
(1911 – 1918)
- Type: Pistol
- Calibers: 9x19mm, 9x23mm Steyr
- Weight: 2.6 lbs (1.2 kg)
- Length: 8.5 in (21.6 cm)
- Barrel length: 5 in (12.8 cm)
- Capacity: 8, 16 (P.16)
- Fire Modes: Semi-Auto, Semi-Auto/Full-Auto (P.16)
The Steyr M1912 pistol has been seen in the following:
Film
Television
Show Title | Actor | Character | Note / Episode | Air Date |
---|---|---|---|---|
Bors | Károly Gyulai | Ödön Lukács | "Hallo...Operator?" (S1E4) | 1968 |
The Sinful People of Prague | Josef Vinklár | Inspector Bouše | "Černé rukavice" (S1E5) | 1968-1970 |
Shadows Disappear at Noon (Teni ischezayut v polden) | Anatoliy Solovyov | Philemon Kolesnikov | Ep.1; in holster | 1972 |
The Road to Calvary (Khozhdenie po mukam) | Sergey Yakovlev | Mamont Dalskiy | Chrome plated; Ep.8 | 1977 |
Demon of the Revolution (Demon revolyutsii) | (uncredited) | The second hitman | 2017 | |
The Mandalorian | Carl Weathers | Greef Karga | mocked up to look like a blaster | 2019 |
Video Games
Game Title | Appears as | Notation | Release Date |
---|---|---|---|
Battlefield: 1918 | 2004 | ||
Men of War | 2009 | ||
Battle of Empires : 1914-1918 | 2014 | ||
Hot Dogs, Horseshoes & Hand Grenades | "M1912" | Standard variant | 2016 |
"M1912/P16" | Machine pistol variant, with fixed shoulder stock | ||
Battlefield 1 | "Repetierpistole M1912" / "Maschinenpistole M1912/P.16" | Pistol version available in base game, machine pistol version added in Turning Tides DLC | 2016 |
Battlefield V | "Repetierpistole M1912" | 2018 | |
Tannenberg | "Steyr M1912 Steyr-Hahn" | 2019 |
See Also
- Steyr Mannlicher - A list of all firearms manufactured by Steyr Mannlicher.