found: Dict. de biog. franç.(Gabriel, Jules-Joseph Gabriel de Lurieu, dit; b. 2/11/1792, d. either 3/28 or 11/28/1869)
found: Bib. nat.(Lurieu, Jules-Joseph-Gabriel de; predom. usage, M. Gabriel, occas. usage J. Gabriel)
found: His Paris au village, 1834:t.p. (M. Jules) [Info from InU]
found: His Le vieux sorcier, 1898:t.p. (De Lurieu) [Info from InU]
found: Sauvage, T. Dolly, ou, Le coeur d'une femme, 1835:t.p. (G. de Lurieu) [Info from InU]
found: His L'innocente et le mirliton, 1818:t.p. (M. G.***) [Info from InU]
found: Gersin, N. Les dames à la mode, 1826.
found: Le triolet bleu, 1834:title page (MM. Gabriel, Devilleneuve et Masson)
found: Wikipedia, German, November 1, 2017(Jules Joseph Gabriel; Jules Joseph Gabriel de Lurieu (born February 11, 1792 in Paris, died March 28, 1869 in Paris) was a French theater poet; De Lurieu, who mostly published under his first name Jules Joseph Gabriel was one of the most popular French comedy poets and librettists of his time; he created more than 130 vaudevilles, comedies and opera libretti during his lifetime)
found: Wikipedia, November 1, 2017(Gabriel de Lurieu; Gabriel de Lurieu, real name Gabriel-Zéphirin Gonyn de Lurieu, (Paris, 28 October 1799--Paris 5 February 1889) was a French author and playwright; he signed with Armand d'Artois and Francis de Lurieu under the collective pseudonym "Sapajou," and under "J. Gabriel," "Jules," "Gabriel Lurieu" and "Monsieur Sapajou;" his brother Jules-Joseph-Gabriel Gonyn de Lurieu (1792-1869), with whom he is sometimes mistaken, was also a playwright)