This is the absorbing story of the handguns credited to Nambu Kijiro,
the principal personal-defence weapons of the Imperial forces.
Featuring full-color artwork and carefully chosen photographs, this
book charts the origins, development, combat use, and legacy of the
Nambu pistols. Cutaway artwork reveals the inner workings of these
important handguns, while specially commissioned battlescenes depict
them in use in action. Influenced by the German C 96 and other
semi-automatic pistols, the first Nambu model was never accepted for
universal issue, being confined largely to purchase by Japanese
officers. Adopted in 1925, the 14th Year Type was to become the
best-known of these handguns, serving in every campaign undertaken by
the Japanese in the 1930s and then throughout World War II. It served
alongside the bizarrely conceived Type 94, intended as the weapon of
airmen, tank crew, and anyone to whom its compact dimensions were
useful. When World War II ended, thousands of Nambu pistols arrived in
America with US veterans of World War II, while others were carried by
insurgents and other armed groups across South East Asia for decades
after 1945. Fully illustrated, this is the engrossing story of these
distinctive pistols, from their origins to their legacy.
Les mer
Japanese military handguns 1900–45
Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9781472855442
Publisert
2023
Utgave
1. utgave
Utgiver
Bloomsbury UK
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Digital bok
Forfatter