Category
page 1World War II infantry weapons of China
Thompson submachine gun
American submachine gun
Tokarev
Soviet semi-automatic pistol
Karabiner 98k
bolt action rifle
MG 34
general-purpose machine gun

Sten
The STEN (or Sten gun) is a British submachine gun chambered in 9×19mm which was used extensively by British and Commonwealth forces throughout World War II and during the Korean War. The Sten paired a simple design with a low production cost, facilitating mass production to meet the demand for submachine guns. As well as equipping regular units, the Sten was distributed to resistance groups within occupied Europe. Its simple design made it an effective insurgency weapon for resistance groups.
Mauser C96
semi-automatic pistol
MP 18
submachine gun
MG 08
7.9 mm heavy machine gun
M1917 Browning machine gun
heavy machine gun
ZB vz. 26
Czechoslovak light machine gun
dao
single-edged Chinese sword primarily used for slashing and chopping
FN M1900
semi-automatic pistol

ZB-53
The ZB-53 was a Czechoslovak machine gun. A versatile weapon, it was used both as a squad support weapon, as a mounted machine gun for tanks and other armoured vehicles, and on fixed positions inside Czechoslovak border fortifications. Adopted before World War II by the armies of Czechoslovakia (as Těžký kulomet vz. 37, heavy machine gun model 37) and Romania, it was also license-built in the United Kingdom as the Besa machine gun. Following the German invasion of Czechoslovakia, large quantities of the weapon were captured by the Wehrmacht and used during the war under the designation of MG 3
Chiang Kai-shek rifle
Chinese bolt-action rifle
ZB vz. 30
7.9 mm machine gun
ZH-29
The ZH-29 was a semi-automatic rifle developed in Czechoslovakia during the late 1920s, and used by the Chinese National Revolutionary Army.
Stielhandgranate 24
German stick grenade
Hanyang 88
bolt action rifle
Brandt Model 27/31
1930s portable 81 mm mortar of French origin

60 mm mortar M2
60 mm mortar of American origin

Stielhandgranate
' (lit. "Stick hand grenade") is a series of World War I and World War II–era German hand grenade designs, also known as the Potato masher (), Doorknocker (), or Jam-pot and stick grenade' (by the British in WWI), The first models were introduced by the Imperial German Army during World War I and the final design was introduced during World War II by the German Wehrmacht.

General Liu rifle
type of semi-automatic rifle
SIG Neuhausen KE7
type of light machine gun
M18
1940s recoilless rifle of American origin
Miaodao
thumb|Miaodao in its scabbard
thumb|upright|Miaodao blade
The miaodao (苗刀) is a Chinese two-handed dao or saber, with a narrow blade, long hilt, and an overall length of or longer. The name means "sprout saber", presumably referring to a likeness between the weapon and a newly sprouted plant. An early reference, in Jin Yiming's Single Defense-Saber, makes a connection between the miaodao and the Qing-era wodao, as well as mentioning both single and two-handed versions of the miaodao, suggesting that the name originally described the shape only, without any connotations of size. While the miaod
Standardmodell rifle
German rifle
FN Mauser Model 24
Belgian-made rifle