Paris, France - The eldest son of French World War II Resistance leader and first postwar president Charles de Gaulle has died aged 102, his family said Wednesday.
Philippe de Gaulle heeded his father's call to join Free French forces in the fight against Nazism in World War II and later had a successful naval career, rising to the rank of admiral, and also became a senator.
(FILES) Portrait of Amiral Philippe de Gaulle during the TV program "L'Heure de Vérité", on the set of France 2, on January 28, 1991, in Paris. French admiral Philippe De Gaulle, son of General Charles de Gaulle, has died aged 102 his family told AFP. (Photo by Derrick CEYRAC / AFP)
He was a more low-key figure than his father but devoted himself to preserving the memory of Charles de Gaulle, notably through numerous books.
His son Yves de Gaulle told AFP he died overnight Tuesday to Wednesday in the Invalides in central Paris, the French military institution where he had lived for two years.
"Philippe de Gaulle anticipated to father's call to join the Resistance. Sailor, admiral, senator, he never came up short when courage and honour were required. A century of French bravery," President Emmanuel Macron wrote in a tribute on X.
He joined the Free French Naval Forces in 1940 and fought in the North Atlantic until 1944, then in France itself when the Resistance joined the Allies in pushing the Nazis out of France.