List of German weapons of World War I
This is a list of German weapons of World War I.
Infantry weapons

- Bayard M1908 (semi-automatic pistol)
 - Beholla M1915 (semi-automatic pistol)
 - Bergmann–Bayard M1910 (semi-automatic pistol)
 - Bergmann MP 18-I (submachine gun)
 - Dreyse M1907 (semi-automatic pistol)
 - Flachmine 17 (anti-tank mine)
 - Frommer M1912 Stop (pistol)
 - GRC Gewehr 88/05, Gewehr 88/14, Gewehr 91 and Karabiner 88 (carbine and rifle)
 - Hebel M1894 (flare gun)
 - Lance
 - Langenhan M1914 Selbstlader (semi-automatic pistol)
 - Luger P04 and P08 (pistol)
 - M1873 Artilleriesäbel (sword)
 - M1889 Infanteriesäbel (sword)
 - M1913 Karabingranate[1] (carbine grenade)
 - M1914 Karabingranate[1] (carbine grenade)
 - M1917 Karabingranate[1] (carbine grenade)
 - M1913 Kugelhandgranate (hand grenade)
 - M1915 Kugelhandgranate NA (hand grenade)
 - M1915 Diskushandgranate[1] (offensive version and defensive version hand grenade)
 - M1915, M1916 and M1917 Stielhandgranate (hand stickgrenade)
 - M1917 Eierhandgranate (hand grenade)
 - Mauser C78 and C86 Zig-Zag (revolver)
 - Mauser C96 (semi-automatic pistol)
 - Mauser Gewehr 71 and 71/84 (rifle)
 - Mauser Gewehr 98 (rifle)
 - Mauser Karabiner 98A (carbine version of the Mauser Gewehr 98 rifle)
 - Mauser M1887 (rifle)
 - Mauser M1910 and M1914 (semi-automatic pistol)
 - Mauser M1915 and M1916 Selbstlader (semi-automatic rifle)
 - Mondragón M1908 (semi-automatic rifle)
 - Reichsrevolver M1879 and M1883
 - Schwarzlose M1908 (semi-automatic pistol)
 - Seitengewehr 84/98 III (bayonet)
 - Seitengewehr 98/05 (bayonet)
 - Steyr M1912 (semi-automatic pistol)
 - Walther 4 (semi-automatic gun, also known as vest gun)
 - Werder M1869 (rifle)
 
Machine guns
- Bergmann MG 15 (water cooled version heavy machine gun)
 - Bergmann MG 15nA (air cooled version light machine gun)
 - Gast M1917
 - Madsen M1902
 - Maxim machine gun
 - MG 18 TuF (heavy anti-tank and anti-aircraft machine gun)
 - MG 99, MG 01, MG 08, MG 08/15, MG 08/18 and MG 09
 - Parabellum MG 14 and MG 14/17 (lightweight redesign of the MG 08)
 - Schmeisser-Dreyse MG 12, MG 15 and MG 18[2]
 
Special weapons
- 7.58 cm M1914 leicht Minenwerfer
 - 7.62 cm Infanteriegeschütz L/16.5
 - 7.7 cm Infanteriegeschütz L/20
 - 7.7 cm Infanteriegeschütz L/27
 - 17 cm M1913 mittler Minenwerfer
 - 25 cm M1910 schwer Minenwerfer
 - Albrecht 24 cm M1917 schwer Flügelminenwerfer
 - Albrecht 25 cm M1916 schwer Minenwerfer
 - Becker 2 cm M2 (anti-tank and anti-aircraft gun)
 - Ehrhardt 24 cm M1915 schwer Ladungswerfer
 - Flammenwerfer M1916
 - Granatenwerfer 16
 - Grossflammenwerfer M1911
 - IKO 24 cm M1917 schwer Flügelminenwerfer
 - Kleinflammenwerfer M1911
 - Lanz 9.15 cm M1914 leicht Minenwerfer
 - Mauser 1.3 cm M1918 Tankgewehr (anti-tank rifle)
 - Sauterelle (grenade launching crossbow captured from the French)
 - Wechselapparat Flammenwerfer M1917
 
Artillery
- 6 cm S-Bts K L/21 (landing gun)
 - 7.5 cm Gebirgskanone L/13 C/80 (mountain gun)
 - 7.5 cm Gebirgskanone L/14 M1913 (mountain gun)
 - 7.62 cm FlaK L/30 (anti-aircraft gun)
 - 7.7 cm FlaK L/27 (anti-aircraft gun)
 - 7.7 cm FlaK L/35 (anti-aircraft gun)
 - 7.7 cm FK 96 (field gun)
 - 7.7 cm FK 96 n.A. (field gun)
 - 7.7 cm FK 16 (field gun)
 - 7.7 cm Kanone in Haubitzelafette (field gun on howitzer carriage)
 - 8 cm Kanone C/73
 - 8 cm Kanone C/80
 - 8.8 cm Flak 16 (anti-aircraft gun)
 - 9 cm Kanone C/73
 - 9 cm Kanone C/79
 - 10 cm K 04
 - 10 cm K 14
 - 10 cm K 17
 - 10.5 cm Feldhaubitze 98/09 (field howitzer)
 - 10.5 cm Gebirgshaubitze L/12 (mountain gun)
 - 10.5 cm leFH 16 (light field howitzer)
 - 12 cm Kanone C/80
 - 13.5 cm K 09
 - 15 cm Kanone 16
 - 15 cm L/40 Feldkanone i.R. (field gun)
 - 15 cm Ring Kanone C/72
 - 15 cm Ring Kanone C/92
 - 15 cm Ring Kanone L/30
 - 15 cm sFH 93 (heavy field howitzer)
 - 15 cm sFH 02 (heavy field howitzer)
 - 15 cm sFH 13 (heavy field howitzer)
 - 15 cm SK "Nathan"
 - 17 cm SK L/40 i.R.L. auf Eisenbahnwagen
 - 21 cm L/14.5 Mörser 16 (mortar)
 - 21 cm Mörser 10 (mortar)
 - 21 cm Mörser 99 (mortar)
 - 21 cm SK "Peter Adalbert"
 - 21 cm Versuchmörser 06 (mortar)
 - 24 cm SK L/30 "Theodor Otto"
 - 24 cm SK L/40 "Theodor Karl"
 - 28 cm Haubitze L/12 (howitzer)
 - 28 cm Haubitze L/14 i.R. (howitzer)
 - 28 cm K L/40 "Kurfürst" (six 28 cm MRK L/40 naval guns were converted to railway guns)
 - 28 cm SK L/40 "Bruno" (28 cm SK L/40 gun naval guns were converted to railway guns)
 - 38 cm SK L/45 "Max" (long range coast-defence gun and siege gun)
 - 42 cm Gamma Mörser (siege gun)
 - 42 cm kurze MK 14 L/12 (siege gun, also known as "Bertha")
 - Ehrhardt 7.5 cm Model 1904 (mountain gun)
 - Gruson 5.3cm L/24 Fahrpanzer (mobile artillery turret)
 - Krupp 3.7 cm L/14.5 Sockelflugzeugabwehrkanone (anti-aircraft gun)
 - Krupp 7.5 cm Model 1903 (field gun)
 - Paris Gun (also known as 21 cm "Wilhelm")
 - Rheinmetall 3.7 cm M1918 Tankabwehrkanone (anti-tank gun)
 
Other vehicles
- A7V Flakpanzer[3] 1918 (anti-aircraft tank)
 - A7V Schutzengrabenbagger[4] 1918 (trench digger)
 - A7V Sturmpanzerwagen[5] 1917 (heavy tank)
 - A7V Uberlandwagen[6] 1917 (supply carrier)
 - Benz-SAG BL10 panzerkraftwagen 1912 (armored truck)
 - Büssing A5P[7] 1915 (armored car)
 - Bussing Kraftzugwagen KZW 1800 1916 (gun carrier)
 - Daimler Marienfelde ALZ 13 1913 (supply truck)
 - Daimler Marienwagen II halbspur 1916 (supply halftrack)
 - Daimler Marienwagen II gepanzerter halbspur[8] 1917 (armored halftrack)
 - Daimler Marienwagen II tankabwehrkanone[9] 1918 (anti-tank halftrack)
 - Daimler Panzerautomobil[7] 1915 (armored car)
 - Duhrkopp (Dur) Wagen[10] 1916 (supply carrier)
 - Ehrhardt E-V/4[11] (early version 1915 and late version 1917 armored car)
 - Ehrhardt Gepanzerter triebwagen 1917 (armored railcar)
 - Lanz Gleiskettenschlepper 1918 (supply carrier)
 - Leicht kampfwagen II[12] 1918 (light tank that was rarely used conducting escorts and never saw combat)
 - Mannesmann Motoren und Lastwagen AG panzerkraftwagen[13] 1916 (armored truck)
 - Nacke 3.5t 1913 (supply truck)
 - Nacke 5t 1915 (supply truck)
 - NSU 3 1.2 PS[14] 1914 (sidecar motorcycle)
 - Opel 4t 1915 (supply truck)
 - Porsche Generatorzugwagen[15] 1916 (gun carrier)
 
Ships
Submarines
Airships
- Gross-Basenach M-IV
 - Parseval PL-19
 - Parseval PL-25
 - List of Schütte-Lanz airships
 - List of Zeppelin airships
 
Airplanes
Note that those airplanes were mainly used.
- AEG C.IV
 - AEG G.II
 - Ago C.I
 - Albatros C.III
 - Albatros D.II
 - Albatros D.III
 - Albatros D.V
 - Albatros G.III
 - Albatros W.4
 - Aviatik C.I
 - Aviatik D.I
 - DFW C.V
 - DFW R.I
 - Fokker E.I
 - Fokker E.II
 - Fokker E.III
 - Fokker E.IV
 - Fokker D.VII
 - Fokker D.VIII (also known as E.V)
 - Fokker Dr.I (also known as F.I)
 - Friedrichshafen G.III
 - Gotha G.IV
 - Junkers D.I (also known as J9)
 - Junkers J.I (also known as J4)
 - Halberstadt CL.II
 - Halberstadt D.II
 - Hannover CL.III
 - LFG Roland C.II
 - LFG Roland D.II
 - LVG C.V
 - Pfalz D.III
 - Pfalz D.XII
 - Rumpler C.IV
 - Rumpler G.I
 - Siemens-Schuckert SSW R.I
 - Zeppelin-Dornier RS.III
 - Zeppelin-Staaken R.VI
 
References
Citations
- ^ a b c d "Passion & Compassion 1914-1918 : WW1 militaria and technical documentation - german grenades". www.passioncompassion1418.com.
 - ^ "HyperWar: The Machine Gun (Vol. I/Part III)". www.ibiblio.org.
 - ^ Harris, Toby (9 December 2016). "Flakpanzer A7V". Tank Encyclopedia.
 - ^ Moore, Craig (13 April 2020). "A7V Schützengrabenbagger LMG Trench Digger". Tank Encyclopedia.
 - ^ Forty & Livesey 2006, p. 52.
 - ^ "A7V Überlandwagen". www.landships.info.
 - ^ a b Zaloga 2006.
 - ^ Kempf & Radley (ed.), "Daimler Marienwagen gepanzerter halbspur".
 - ^ Kempf & Radley (ed.), "Daimler Marienwagen tankabwehrkanone".
 - ^ "Deutsche Panzer von 1903-1918". dergrenadier.de. Archived from the original on 31 May 2019.
 - ^ Bishop 2006, p. 27.
 - ^ Forty & Livesey 2006, p. 88.
 - ^ Lepage 2014, p. 172.
 - ^ "Armed and armoured bicycles and motorbikes". www.landships.info.
 - ^ Nash, Mark (17 March 2020). "Landwehr Zug". Tank Encyclopedia.
 
Bibliography
- Bishop, Chris (2006). The Encyclopedia of Tanks & Armoured Fighting Vehicles. Hoo, nr Rochester: Grange books. ISBN 978-1-84013-907-5.
 - Forty, George; Livesey, Jack (2006). The World Encyclopedia of Tanks and Armoured Fighting Vehicles. London: Anness Publishing Ltd. ISBN 978-0754833512.
 - Kempf, Peter, Landships II
 - Lepage, Jean-Denis G. G. (2014). German Military Vehicles of World War II: An Illustrated Guide to Cars, Trucks, Half-Tracks, Motorcycles, Amphibious Vehicles and Others. Jefferson, North Carolina: McFarland & Co. Ltd. ISBN 9780786462520.
 - Zaloga, Steven J. (2006). German Panzers 1914–18. New Vanguard. Oxford: Osprey Publishing. ISBN 9781472801760.