The gun might have made by a Parisian arquebusiere named
Emile Henri LeFauré or FAURÉ. From Wikipedia:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Faur%C3%A9_Le_Page
https://gw.geneanet.org/pierfit?lang=en&p=louise+emilie&n=faureArquebusier et fourbisseur in Paris (1865–1913), Warranted supplier to the Russian Imperial Court.
The old Fauré Le Page store is located at 8, rue de Richelieu in Paris
Emile was Henri Le Page's nephew, and Louis Didier Fauré and d’Eléonore Méliade’s son. He became partner with Gilles Louis Michel Moutier in 1865 and becomes sole owner in 1868.
He developed his international clientele and became the warranted supplier to the Russian Imperial Court. Taking part in each of the Universal Expos he accumulated honors in Paris in 1865 (First Class Medal), in 1867 (Silver Medal), in 1878 (Gold Medal), in 1889 (Grand Prix), and in Vienna in 1873 (Medal of Progress[11])
He was ordained Chevalier de la Légion d'Honneur in 1878 and then Officer of the Légion d’Honneur in 1894.
The store opened at number 8, rue de Richelieu (at the corner with the rue de Montpensier which gives onto the Place du Théâtre Français), at the foot of the Royal Palace Hotel which opened its doors in 1909.
In 1913, the armourer Dumond took over Fauré Le Page but kept the brand name and formed a company in 1925.
Emile Henry Fauré Le Page died in 1929 and was buried at the Père Lachaise Cemetery.
Or it could be
L. LeFauré, armorer in Paris, 1850-1872, 22 boulevard Montmartre. His father Pierre-Alexis Lefaure, an armorer in Presles, showed his barrels at the Paris exhibition in 1823, 1839 and 1844.
![[Linked Image from i.imgur.com]](https://i.imgur.com/IY4zzpW.png)
If the barrels are stamped "Bernard" it could be either Léopold or Albert BERNARD. Léopold was the preeminent barrel maker in all of France. There should be a date stamped on the underside of the barrels near the SN.
One of his Lefaure's ancestors may have been a barrel maker in Paris 1750-1790.
https://www.metmuseum.org/art/collection/search/24942In 1835 Lefaure working as an arquebusiere in Paris wrote a testimonial for Lefaucheaux about the sturdiness of the Lefaucheaux center break guns.
For the past two years that I have been manufacturing the so-called Lefaucheux hinge-action gun, I declare that this gun is still the only one that offers as much sturdiness, combining a simple and easy manufacture with all the advantages that all rear-loading guns have. I have several in commerce and among hunters who make extensive use of them. I see nothing that goes out of order in this gun more than in the piston gun. The flash hole is preserved from wear by the cartridge casing; and the connection of the barrel with the breech piece is equally guaranteed by the base. As a result, and experience has proven it, this gun will last at least as long as the piston gun that loads with a ramrod.
Lefaure,
Gunsmith, in Paris.There are LeFauré guns for sale on naturabuy.
https://www.naturabuy.fr/FUSIL-JUXT...LE-CANON-A-PERCUSSION--item-9428658.htmlOn "Little gun" there is a Lefaure pistol that he apparently designed to get around the Flobert patent which has the identical markings.
https://www.littlegun.info/arme%20francaise/artisans%20k%20l/a%20lefaure%20gb.htm![[Linked Image from i.imgur.com]](https://i.imgur.com/rSaSaHr.png)
Can't tell you much more with this very cursory search. Perhaps FAB can weigh in.