Standard Catalog of Firearms
Carl-Gustav and Sylvia!
Two come to mind, Gustav Mahler, Austrian, 1860-1911 and Gustav Holst, English (of Swedish descent hence the names) 1874-1934.
6€...
There is no Gustav I. Presumably, this question refers to Gustav Vasa, the creator of the Swedish inhereted monarchy, and generally seen as the founder of the modern Sweden. He was crowned King of Sweden on January 12, 1528.
Gustav is of Swedish origin, and means "staff of the Goths"--which itself comes from Old Norse (Gautr ("Goth") and stafr ("staff")). # Gustav is a male given name of Old Swedish origin, means `staff of the Goths`, derived from the Old Norse elements `Gautr` (`Goth`) and `stafr` (`staff`). This name has been borne by six Kings of Sweden.Found on http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gustav# Gustav is a Scandinavian boy name. The meaning of the name is `Staff of the gods` It is an abbreviated form of August.
Gustav Vasa and Karl XIV Johan (Jean Baptiste Bernadotte) would be the most famous ones.
Northwest...looking like the same path as Gustav...a little more west than Gustav
Gustav, Bill, Tom, Georg go from left to right
Lanthanum was discovered by the Swedish chemist Carl Gustav Mosander (professor in Stockholm) in 1839. See the link below for some details.
Depending on the language, it may be Gustave (e.g. Swedish) or Gustav (e.g. German). The name also has variants Gustaff, Gusztaf, and Gustavo.
Sounds like you have one of the Swedish "Mausers". Year of manufacture should be engraved in the crown.
A few notable events include: the Swedish Empire under Gustav II Adolf landing in Pomerania, Germany to aid Protestants, the beginning of Swedish intervention in the Thirty Years' War, and the founding of the city of Boston, Massachusetts.