In the aftermath of
World War I and the
Polish-Soviet War of 1920 the Polish Army used a variety of World War I
rifle grenade launchers and light mortars, notably the German World War I-vintage light mortar pressed into Polish service under the designation of
Granatnik wz. 16 and the French
VB rifle grenade designed for the ageing
Lebel Rifle. While battle-tested, these weapons were neither accurate nor did they offer enough fire support on a modern battlefield. To counter that in 1927 the Central Rifle School of
Toruń developed a new blunderbuss, or more properly a rifle grenade launcher to be used with the then-standard
Kb wz. 98a rifle. This design however proved little better than the already used weapons and in 1929 all further trials were halted. Work on a new weapon was resumed by the Institute of Material Research for Armament () by a team led by Lt. Col. Kick. It was decided to abandon the idea of a rifle grenade altogether and instead design a crossover between a light mortar and a
grenade launcher. In April 1931 a prototype of a new mortar was completed. After a series of successful tests, the weapon was accepted by the Polish Army under the designation of
granatnik wz. 30 ("grenade launcher Mark 1930"). An order for 400 pieces was placed in the
Perkun company in Warsaw. By July 1932 the first mortars entered service. Meanwhile, the
Instytut Techniczny Uzbrojenia (Armament Technical Institute) continued to improve the design and eventually came up with four different projects, initially code-named "type A", B, C and D. (some sources call them "granatnik wz. 30", "wz. 33", "wz. 35" and "wz. 36", respectively). The Centre for Ballistic Studies at
Zielonka conducted extensive tests of the four new prototypes hand-made by the Warsaw-based
Państwowa Fabryka Karabinów. Eventually the "type D" was chosen and was accepted by the Polish Army as
granatnik wz. 36. The first batch was ordered at the
I. Zieleniewski factory in Kraków, at a price of 1032
złoty apiece. The first batch of 850 was delivered to the armed forces by the end of July 1937. Another batch of 1,500 followed the next year. Overall, some 3850 were delivered to the army (397 of wz. 30 and 3453 of wz. 36 type), which allowed the creation of either a separate light mortar section of three mortars in every infantry company, or arming every infantry platoon with at least one grenade launcher. Full documentation of the wz. 36 mortar and the 46 mm grenades was given free of charge to
Yugoslavia in late 1930s, but no licence production followed. == Operation ==