Anciens Etablissements Pieper

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Share of the Anciens Etablissements Pieper SA, issued 1905 Anciens Etabl. Pieper 1905.jpg
Share of the Anciens Établissements Pieper SA, issued 1905

Anciens Etablissements Pieper was a Belgian arms manufacturer established under the name Henri Pieper in Herstal, Belgium in 1884 (some sources, 1866), by Henri Pieper. In 1898, it was renamed to Nicolas Pieper, and it became the Anciens Etablissements Pieper in 1905. It stayed in business until approximately 1950. The company used the Bayard trade name (after the legendary horse of Renaud de Montauban) and manufactured the Bergmann–Bayard pistol and the Bayard 1908 pistol.

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Pieper

Pieper petrol-electric car Pieper petroleo-electrique 1900.png
Pieper petrol-electric car

From 1897, the company also produced cars. [1] In 1900, Henri Pieper introduced a hybrid vehicle with an electric motor/generator, batteries, and a small gasoline engine. It used the electric motor to charge its batteries at cruise speed and used both motors to accelerate or climb a hill. The Pieper factory was taken over by Impéria, after Pieper died.

Auto-Mixte, also of Belgium, built vehicles from 1906 to 1912 under the Pieper patents.

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The Bayard 1908 is a semi-automatic pistol that patented and designed by Belgian Bernard Clarus in 1907 as a short-range self-defense handgun. The Bayard 1908 was sold on the civilian market, chambered in .25 ACP, .32 ACP, and .380 ACP. The Belgian factory Anciens Etablissements Pieper produced it from 1908 until the late 1930s. Smith and Wesson engineers reintroduced the design of the Bayard 1908 in their Model 61 pistol, which ran in production from 1970 to 1973.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Bergmann–Bayard pistol</span> Semi-automatic pistol

The Bergmann–Bayard was a German-designed semi-automatic pistol produced under license in Belgium.

Bayard may refer to:

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References

  1. Georgano: The Beaulieu Encyclopedia of the Automobile

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