Thanks for the clarification, David, and I agree, I don't see how a single Bourdon tube would work as a true absolute gage, unless it had a sealed, evacuated case (but how to know the case didn't leak?). A pressure capsule, where the capsule is evacuated and the outside of the capsule pressurized, would work - but there is still a worry about leakage of pressure out of the sealed case.
But, you can have two identical Bourdon tubes, one acting as an aneroid (i.e. the tube is evacuated) and arranged mechanically in opposition to the pressure-sensing Bourdon tube. The outsides of both tubes would reference the same external, atmospheric pressure.
That is not how the Ashcroft gages work, that unclesyd posted, given that their spec sheet reads: "Ranges Available in Gauge, Compound, Vacuum and Absolute (requires manual barometric compensation)" (underline added by me)
It does seem to be how the higher-pressure absolute gages from Wika work, according to the spec sheet that hydtools posted: "Series 1500 Gauges pressure elements are capsules up to and including the 50 psia range: 100 psia and above use Bourdon tubes. In the former, pressure is applied to the case and is referenced against the evacuated capsule.
In the latter, pressure is applied to a Bourdon tube, which is referenced against an evacuated Bourdon."