This gun was released in the early days of automatic pistols, and was a contemporary of the Mauser C96 and Borchardt C-93 pistols.[5][2] The Bergmann 1894/1896/1897 pistols failed to achieve the same widespread success, although Bergmann himself later went on to design one of the earliest practical and successful sub-machine guns, the MP-18.
There are several variations, but the internal mechanisms remain almost the same in all of them. The first cartridges in Bergmann pistols were grooveless, with the bullets having a sharp nose to avoid jams. Later pistols, however, have mechanical extractors and cartridges with grooved flanges. The M96 had an internal box-magazine holding five cartridges. [6][better source needed]
M1893
In 1893, Theodor Bergmann collaborated with Louis Schmeisser to create a new firearms, with their first pistol design being the Model 1893.[2] The initial design patented in 1893 was chambered for a rimless 8mm cartridge.
The development of automatic pistols began with the goal of reducing the size of a rifle mechanism so that it could be held in one hand, so this gun has a magazine in front of the trigger like the (later) Mauser C96, but it uses the Mannlicher method of loading, where the clip, that also wraps around the sides of the bullet, is inserted.
However, the clip was not left in the gun, but had a round handle at the rear end that was removed after loading. There was an internal magazine in front of the trigger, and the fan-shaped cover on the right side was opened by rotating it forward, and the ammunition and clip were inserted into the magazine, and when the cover was closed, the feed lever worked to push the ammunition up.
The internal mechanism uses delayed blowback, which reduces the power of recoil by delaying the timing of the shot and the blowback, and blows back with the appropriate force.
The Model 1893 was considered cumbersome in terms of its handling characteristics and overall appearance. The 1893 design would be further refined by subsequent models.[2]
M1894
Improvement over the Model 1893, the Bergmann Model 1894, retroactively designated as No. 1,[7] came chambered in 5mm, 6.5mm and 8mm cartridges, all which would be used by subsequent Model 1896 as well.
These pistols were built without extractors, as these cartridges were designed rimless and without extractor grooves.[2] Instead, the cartridges had a bottleneck and a steep taper (except for the 8mm). This was said to be so that the case could be ejected by gas pressure without using an extractor (an extractor was added later). It held five rounds, and had an external exposed hammer. The chamber and hammer were separated, so it had a long firing pin.
Unlike prior M1893, the M1894 was commercially offered to buyers. Small numbers of M1894/No. 1 were ultimately made.[8]
Upon release, the Model 1894 was commercially overshadowed by the Borchardt C-93, which is why the C-93 is considered the world's first practical semi-automatic pistol.[2][9]
Versions designated M1893 and M1894 were evaluated and rejected by Swiss, German, and Belgian military trials; and the M1896 design reflected improvements to correct shortcomings reported by those trials.[9][10] While the earlier models had been manufactured by Louis Schmeisser, the M1896 was built under license by Charles V. Schilling of Suhl.[citation needed]
In comparison to its predecessor and its successor, it is the most widely produced model of this pistol family. Three cartridges were chambered for the M1896 pistols. Approximately 2,000 small pistols designated M1896 No. 2 were chambered for the 5mm Bergmann. Production of a larger pistol was approximately 4,400 M1896 No. 3 chambered for the 6.5mm Bergmann, plus two or three hundred M1896 No. 4 chambered for the 8mm Bergmann.[9][10]
No. 2 variant was initially released with a folding trigger, which was located at the front of the internal magazine, in order to help with its portability in concealment. However, this variant proved to be accident prone and was disliked by its users. This resulted in Bergmann introducing a revised No. 2 variant in the summer of 1896 with a more conventional trigger layout.[11]
According to Leonardo M. Antaris, the Model 1896 was "arguably the first commercially successful semi-automatic pistol". He cites author Geoffrey Sturgess[a] in saying that "Bergmann had already sold several thousand pistols while [Borchardt C-93]'s sales were still in the hundreds."[9] Although the M1896 gained better visibility than prior M1894, being produced in larger numbers, its weak caliber options attracted criticism. All three of them were considered under-powered for combat, with the largest 8mm caliber being comparable to 7.65 Browning in terms of power. As such, the Model 1896 was refused by the military clients.[13]
Another major fault in the 1896 models was its ejection system, which bounced the spent round off the next round in the internal magazine. This feature would be dropped in the subsequent Bergmann pistol designs, including the Model 1897 and Bergmann Simplex.[14]
M1897
With the commercial success of civilian sales for the M1896[citation needed], Bergman made additional modifications hoping to obtain military contracts.
The Bergmann 1897, also called No. 5,[7] was a departure from the principle of the mass-operated bolt. The weapon was a locked recoil loader, the barrel and bolt ran back together until the bolt was unlocked by swinging it sideways. It was also a sturdier design with a shrouded barrel and rear sight adjustable to 1,000 metres (1,100 yd).
The M1897 was chambered for a new 7.8mm Bergmann cartridge, which was created in response to insufficient performance of prior cartridges used both with the 1894 and the 1896. The 7.8mm Bergmann was designed in direct competition with the 7.63×25mm Mauser cartridge, used in the rival Mauser C96 pistol design.[1] The most obvious change was a more modern detachable 10-shot magazine housed in front of the trigger.[2] The magazine could be still fed by a stripper clip.
Most were sold with a hollow shoulder stock. A few had 12-inch (30 cm) barrels with either a conventional carbine configuration or a detachable wooden shoulder stock.
The Model 1897 was again unsuccessful in sales, with similar Mauser C96 capturing an increasing share of civilian sales. It also failed to secure any major military contracts. Approximately 800 or 1000 units were made, until the production was discontinued, with all units sold to civilian markets.[15][9]
The Model 1897 was submitted the Swiss army trials for their new handgun, conducted between October 1897 to late 1899, alongside Mannlicher M1897, Roth–Theodorovic pistol, improved Mauser C96 and "improved Borchardt Pistol" (Luger P08 prototype). The Bergmann pistol, along with the Mauser C96, were outright eliminated for failing to meet the minimum standards. The competition would be won by the completed Luger P08, which would be designated as Ordonnanzpistole 1900.[16] Bergmann built a special 10mm model for British military trials, but was also rejected.[2]
In the 1971 Technicolor Western film Big Jake, the character Michael McCandles (played by Christopher Mitchum), uses a Bergmann 1896 as his sidearm. It is worth noting however, that the pistol was called a Bergmann Mark 1911 in the film, and the actual prop gun was made by modifying a Walther P38 to superficially resemble a Bergmann 1896.
The blaster pistol utilized by the titular character in the 2019 television series The Mandalorian is based on the Bergmann M1894 nº 1.[18]
The Bergmann No.3 is featured as a usable weapon in Hunt: Showdown as the "Bornheim No. 3".[19] 4 variants exist - the pistol, a pistol with a custom 8-round fixed magazine, a long barrelled carbine with a fixed wire stock and a silenced variant.
^Presumably Joachim Gortz & Dr. Geoffrey Sturgess's 2012 book "The Borchardt and Luger Automatic Pistols: A Technical History for Collectors from C93 to P. 08"[12]
References
Sources
Edward Clinton Ezell (1993). Handguns of the World: Military Revolvers and Self-loaders from 1870 to 1945. Barnes & Noble. ISBN9780880296182.
Gerhard Bock: Moderne Faustfeuerwaffen und ihr Gebrauch. J. Neumann, Neudamm 1911
Jaroslav Lugs: Handfeuerwaffen Militärverlag der DDR, Prag 1956
Citations
^ abEdward Clinton Ezell (1993) p.367; [...] Bergmann and Schmeisser once again went back to their drawing boards. They had two goals: a more powerful cartridge and a locked-breech version of their basic pistol The cartridge they developed was similar in dimensions and power to the 7.63 x 25mm ammunition used with the Mauser C96 pistol. Bergmann and Schmeisser called their cartridge the 7.8mm Bergmann to differentiate it from the Mauser round. These two cartridges had different case contours, but both were nominally 7.63mm in caliber.
^Walter, J. (2001). The Greenhill Dictionary of Guns and Gunmakers: From Colt's First Patent to the Present Day, 1836-2001 : Military Small Arms, Sporting Guns and Rifles, Air and Gas Guns, Designers, Manufacturers, Inventors, Patentees, Trademarks, Brandnames, and Monograms. Greenhill Books.
^
United States. Adjutant-General's Office. Military Information Division (1902). Notes of Military Interest for 1901, Number 36. University of Michigan: U.S. Government Printing Office. p. 173-179.
^Walter, John (2008). "4. The Pre-1900 Automatic Pistols". The Hand Gun Story: A Complete Illustrated History. Pen & Sword Books. ISBN9781783469741. The folding-trigger pocket pistol was unpopular, possibly owing to accidents caused by snagging the unprotected trigger, and a revised No. 2 appeared in the summer of 1896, perhaps at about the time a conventional extractor was added to the 6.5mm No. 3. The perfected No. 2 had the trigger in an aperture in the frame behind the magazine well.
^Gortz., Sturgess. (2012). The Borchardt and Luger Automatic Pistols: A Technical History for Collectors from C93 to P. 08. (n.p.): Brad Simpson Publishing. ISBN: 9780972781572
^Edward Clinton Ezell (1993) p.367; The common defect of all of the Bergmann-Schmeisser Modell 1896s was the inadequate power of the cartridges. The 5mm cartridge was roughly com parable in power to the 6.35mm Browning (25 ACP): the 6.35mm Bergmann round was less powerful than the 7.65mm Browning (32 ACP); while the 8mm Bergmann was only slightly more powerful than the 7.65mm Browning. To capture the interest of military services, a more suitable ammunition had to be developed.
^Dougherty, Martin J. (2014). "Early Cartridge Pistols". Pistols and Revolvers. Amber Books Limited. ISBN978-1-78274-266-1. The Bergmann 1896 pistol was typical of the experimental weapons of the time – it had some promising features but also a few flaws. Among these was an ejection system that bounced the spent round off the next round in the magazine. This feature was dropped on the 1897 Bergmann Simplex model and subsequent designs.
^Edward Clinton Ezell (1993) p.369; Commercially and militarily, the Modell 1897 Bergmann-Schmeisser was a failure. Most of the approximately 800 that were made went to commercial customers