August 09, 2011
By Paul Scarlata
Its unusual gas-sealing system was an evolutionary dead end, but the Nagant revolver was part of an amazing amount of history in more than a half-century of service. Read more about it in the 10/20 issue of SGN.
A trio of Red Army officers pose with their Nagant revolvers in 1930. The chance any of
them would survive the purges and warfare of the next 15 years was slim.
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The Revol'ver Sistemy Nagana obr. 1895g served Imperial Russia and the USSR for
almost six decades, despite nominally being replaced by the Tokarev autoloader.
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The obr. 1895g could be easily dissembled for cleaning, and, once you understand it,
is not all that difficult to maintain, despite is unusual gas-seal design.
Between 1930 and 1937 the Polish government produced the Rewolwer Ng30 at the
Radom arsenal, using the original Belgian tooling. (Francis Kennedy photo)
A commissar, armed with an obr. 1895g Nagant, questions a Russian army deserter. The
Germans executed commissars whenever they captured them; it was a risky job.
Soviet partisans were armed with four of the mainstay weapons: obr. 1895g revolver,
Maxim machine gun, Mosin-Nagant rifle and PPSh-41 submachine gun.
This team of Soviet partisans is armed with a Nagant revolver, SVT40 Tokarev rifle, a
Tokarev pistol, Mosin-Nagant rifle and hand grenades.
These are two "Sport" Nagant revolvers intended for target shooting: (top) Model 1927
in .22 Long Rifle and (bottom) a Model 1925 in 7.62mm. (Joe Leiper photo)