Sniping Rifles on the Eastern Front 1939–45

Regular price €19.99
2
20th
41
43
A01=Martin Pegler
A12=Alan Gilliland
A12=Johnny Shumate
arms
Author_Alan Gilliland
Author_Johnny Shumate
Author_Martin Pegler
Category=JWM
Category=NHWL
Category=NHWR7
century
design
development
engineering
eq_bestseller
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eq_isMigrated=1
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gew
gew 41
gew 43
Haya
history
II
Mosin-Nagant
mount
operational
scope
Second
Stalingrad
SVT-38
SVT-40
technology
turret
turret mount
twentieth
War
warfare
World
WW2
WWII
Zaitsev

Product details

  • ISBN 9781472825896
  • Weight: 282g
  • Dimensions: 184 x 246mm
  • Publication Date: 21 Mar 2019
  • Publisher: Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Paperback
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The Soviet Union had developed a significant sniping force by 1939, but the extraordinary skill and cunning displayed by Finnish snipers during the Winter War forced the Soviets to innovate. On the other side, German sniping suffered from a lack of standardization of weapons and a lack of marksmen deployed at the start of the Great Patriotic War (1941–45). There were few heroes in the conflict, but on both sides, the snipers were idolized – especially on the Soviet side, gaining almost mythical status.

As well as traditional bolt-action weapons, both sides used several types of semi-automatic rifle, such as the SVT-38 and the Gew 41. Offering greater firepower at the expense of long-range accuracy, such weapons would be profoundly influential in the postwar world. Fully illustrated, this absorbing study investigates the development of sniping weapons and techniques on World War II’s Eastern Front.

Martin Pegler is a former Senior Curator of Firearms at the Royal Armouries Museum, Leeds. He is currently a firearms consultant and has written a number of articles and books, many for Osprey. He lives in France.

Johnny Shumate works as a freelance illustrator living in Nashville, Tennessee. He began his career in 1987 after graduating from Austin Peay State University. Most of his work is rendered in Adobe Photoshop using a Cintiq monitor. His greatest influences are Angus McBride, Don Troiani, and Édouard Detaille.

Born in Malaya in 1949, Alan Gilliland studied photography/film and architecture, and spent 18 years as the graphics editor of the Daily Telegraph. He now writes, illustrates and publishes fiction as well as illustrating for a variety of publishers. He lives in Lincolnshire, UK.