Double-Barreled Flintlock Shotgun with Exchangeable Percussion Locks and Barrels

Various artists/makers

On view at The Met Fifth Avenue in Gallery 375

Perhaps the richest and most beautiful gun from the last phase of Boutet’s long career, this firearm was made by him after the Restoration of the monarchy in France in 1815. Its exuberant decoration is reminiscent of the style fashionable before the revolution in 1789. The gun was so appreciated by its owner that, in 1860, he commissioned a group of skillful gunmakers to produce a similarly decorated set of barrels and locks using percussion caps, an advanced method of ignition developed after 1820.

Double-Barreled Flintlock Shotgun with Exchangeable Percussion Locks and Barrels, Nicolas Noël Boutet (French, Versailles and Paris, 1761–1833), Steel, gold, wood (walnut), silver, horn, French, Versailles and Paris

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Overall, Deconstructed with alternate set of percussion barrels and locks