I just recently acquired a Broomhandle Mauser that has a MGK 1 on the front of the magazine well. Please see photo. Is this a legit unit marking? I’ll try to upload more photos in a bit; but I wanted to get this into the forum first.
Martin, thank you for that detailed explanation and response. That seems to make the most sense, based on what you revealed and aligns with wartime Imperial German small unit marking/ accounting of firearms. I thought C96’s were popular and issued during WWI? Or is it because it was a commercial weapon and popular amongst many nations and many people prior to WWI that Some German Army units just purchased them direct from factory to issue out or replace weapons lost/captured/broken?There are two basic things you have to devide while looking on ww1 troop stamps.
There are those who are applied following the official rules of the Vorschrift über das Stempeln der Handwaffen D.V.E.Nr.185. vom 28.Januar 1909 and those applied during ww1 called Kriegstruppenstempel (word to word....war time troopstamps).
After 1915 the German armys officialy stoped the habit of aplying troop stamps. But there were still units who marked their weapons by troop stamps Till the end of ww1. Those offen did not follow the former official rules.
What we have here is one of those Kriegstruppenstempel. Since the C96 was never officially adopted in the German armys as a Service weapon this specimen is one of the many substitute weapons in German service of ww1. As such it may Not came into use before the beginning of 1915.
So it has a Kriegstruppenstempel wich is Impossible assign to a certain unit. Some ways of Interpretation are thinkable:
I tend to the second option.
- unnumbered weapons of the first machinegun compagnie of some Infanterieregiment or Jägerbataillon (after 1917 most Infanterieregiment got 3 MGK)
- first C96 of a Maschinengewehrkompanie of Infanterieregiment/Jägerbataillion
Regards Martin