French Tycoon Serge Dassault Dies At 93
One of France's richest men, Serge Dassault, died on Monday after suffering a suspected heart attack, his family said. 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 the capital.
France's third wealthiest person in 2016 -- with a net worth estimated by Forbes magazine at $14.8 billion (12.7 billion euros) -- died in his Paris office on the Champs-Elysees on Monday afternoon, his family said.
Dassault is best known as the principal stakeholder of Dassault Aviation, which has made a series of famed French planes, including the Falcon business jet, the Mirage fighter and the country's most cutting-edge military jet, the Rafale.
"France has a lost a man who dedicated his life to developing a jewel of French industry," French President Emmanuel Macron said in a statement that came amid a flurry of tributes.
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 the capital.
France's third wealthiest person in 2016 -- with a net worth estimated by Forbes magazine at $14.8 billion (12.7 billion euros) -- died in his Paris office on the Champs-Elysees on Monday afternoon, his family said.
Dassault is best known as the principal stakeholder of Dassault Aviation, which has made a series of famed French planes, including the Falcon business jet, the Mirage fighter and the country's most cutting-edge military jet, the Rafale.
"France has a lost a man who dedicated his life to developing a jewel of French industry," French President Emmanuel Macron said in a statement that came amid a flurry of tributes.