Nothing.
You must call Browning. SN does not follow normal convention.
You will have to call Browning to find out.
50-1000 usd
The closest I can come to the gun in your question is not a .38, but a .380 automatic. bojho was a marking used by the Yugoslavian Army on Browning 1922 pistols made by FN. Value of any gun is based on exact make, model, and condition. In Good condition, the Browning 1922 is about a $300-$350 gun.
FN would know when your Browning model 1922 semi-auto pistol was made.These well made semi-auto handguns were made from 1922-1945.several hundred thousand were made under Nazi rule during world war II (1940-1945).
no records of serialization exist prior to 1964 for Browning .380's. The Model 1922 was manufactured from 1922 to 1959 so it falls outside the records dates. There were several hundred thousand of them made by the Nazis from 1940-1944. If your gun has the markings from that era then that was when it was made and that makes it somewhat more valuable. if it has a waa103 mark it has some prewar parts and has a little higher value if it has waa140 a little lower value there both German
Best left to a gunsmith.
OK, let's properly identify this pistol. It is a CZ-27, made in Czechoslovakia under German occupation during World War II. The 'fnh' you undoubtedly are seeing on the slide is NOT 'Fabrique Nationale Herstal' but rather the German code for the Czech factory where that pistol was made. It is not a FN Model 1922, nor a Browning. Condition is absolutely everything on these pistols, and any special unit markings or rare variations can double or even triple the value to a collector. Please provide more information, and digital pictures if possible, to sales@countrygunsmith.net and we will do our best to help you out with an appraisal or possibly even purchase the pistol. www.countrygunsmith.net *Now I know what happened to the AntiqueGuns.com crystal ball! How did you get from a Browning Model 22 to a CZ-27? *Pretty easy. The 'Pistole Modell 27 Kaliber 7.65' was obviously copied directly from the left side of the slide and is the correct marking for a CZ27. At some point someone has misidentified this pistol as a Model 1922 Browning, undoubtedly because of the 'fnh' markings that a wartime CZ27 would show. Neither the FN Model 1922 or the commercially marked Browning version have the markings 'Model 22' so that makes the correct identification easy.
Requires professional appraisal
if you are referring to the model 1911 Colt pistol with serial number 444810, then it was made by Colt in 1918........................
45$to110$depending