One of France's richest men, Serge Dassault, has died in his office after suffering a suspected heart attack, his family announced today. He was 93.
Dassault, head of aviation, media and software giant Dassault Group, was a titan of the French business world who served as a right-wing senator and a scandal-plagued mayor of a town south of Paris.
France's third wealthiest person -- with a net worth estimated by Forbes magazine of USD 14.8 billion (12.7 billion euros) -- died in his office on the Champs-Elysees on Monday afternoon, his family said.
"The family and the Dassault group will communicate shortly about the modalities for paying homage to Mr Serge Dassault," said the statement from the family sent by his company's press office.
Dassault is best known for his controlling stake in Dassault Aviation, which has made a series of famed planes in France, including the Falcon business jet, the Mirage fighter and the country's most cutting-edge military jet, the Rafale.
The father-of-four also owned France's biggest-selling right-wing newspaper, Le Figaro.
The Dassault family's business empire was founded by his father Marcel, an aeronautical engineer and celebrated inventor who developed a propeller used in French planes during the World War I.
Marcel Dassault survived the Buchenwald death camp during World War II after being sent there by occupying Nazi forces because he refused to put his skills at the disposal of the invaders.
Arrested along with the rest of his family by the Gestapo as a teenager, Serge Dassault narrowly avoided deportation and would go on to pursue studies at elite French universities before entering the family business in his twenties.
He finally succeeded his father after his death in 1986 and took the helm of the family group at the age of 61 -- when most people are thinking of retiring.
Defying opposition from the French government, which doubted that he was able to run a high-technology business, he developed Dassault at a time of consolidation in the European aerospace industry and severe competition from US manufacturers.
The Rafale plane, in use in the skies above Iraq and most recently during French strikes on chemical weapons installations in Syria, is considered one of the world's most advanced fighter jets.
One of the first tributes to Dassault came from former French prime minister Manuel Valls who wrote that "his name, and his father's, has shone for decades in France and in the entire world."
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