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Pierre de Froment : ウィキペディア英語版 | Pierre de Froment
Georges-Pierre de Froment (alias ''Pierre Foureix'', and ''Deblé'') was a French soldier and member of the World War II resistance. De Froment was born on November 17, 1913 in Châteauroux, in the garrison town of his father. His father was a graduate of the Saint-Cyr military academies who had been killed leading his company in Artois in May 1915. De Froment enrolled at Saint-Cyr, and after a standard beginning to his career. In 1939, he was sent on as special mission to Poland, where he was present for the debacle. He then returned to France, in May 1940 he took part in operations to block the German army which had crossed the Meuse river. == Resistance (1940-1943)== After the French army's defeat, de Froment met Captain Henri Frenay in Marseille towards the beginning of September 1940. Frenay was engaged in forming an embryonic resistance movement, which would become ''Combat'', the most important movement in the ''zone libre''. Frenay made de Froment his representative in the occupied zone. It was de Froment's responsibility to create a massive information network in the north, assigned directly to passing on clandestine news which Frenay intended would inform the general population and promote a spirit of resistance. Along with Frenay, Robert Guédon and Jacques-Yves Mulliez, de Froment was involved in the creation of the newspaper ''Les Petites Ailes de France'', which was first circulated on 17 May 1941. Towards the beginning of February 1942, ''Combat Zone Nord'', the group led by Guédon and to which de Froment was attached, was scourged by a wave of arrests. Greatly isolated, de Froment nonetheless continued to expand his network in industrial and railway circles across the whole of the ''zone occupée''.
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