I own one of the RAREST Military rifles ever built: an Armaguerra Model 39, built at Cremona in 1940. It is an Italian WW2 semi-auto combat rifle. They are rare enough that most textbooks don't even mention that the things existed. I have been able to locate THREE in Italian museums. That's all.
There were less than 100 made before the factory changed-over to producing Carcano spares and rifles.
As far as I know, there are TWO in Canada. I would swap it, even trade, for my Grandpa's .22, rifle OR shotgun..... but they disappeared onto the second-hand market 90 years ago and today cannot be traced. Who was my Grandpa? Just a young English fur-grader/trader at the HBC post in a little town called Edmonton, 'way back when. Nobody important..... but he was MY Grandpa..... and that makes all the difference in the world to me.
You will be doing yourself..... and your sons..... and your grandsons, a terrible disservice if you sell that revolver.
Maybe YOU don't care..... but THEY MIGHT.
FINE old revolver, fun to shoot, easy to load ammo for and friend JETHUNTER makes the correct 265-grain special Bullet for this gun.
Is "EAA" a family marking..... or is it a MILITARY marking? CERTAINLY worth checking out.