---
title: "May 1968 Paris Uprising"
year: 1968
country: "France"
canonical: "https://recap.at/1968/may-1968-paris-uprising"
slug: "may-1968-paris-uprising"
recapType: "global_event"
startDate: "1968-01-01"
---

# May 1968 Paris Uprising

In May 1968, students occupying the University of Paris sparked a chain reaction of protests and strikes that brought millions of workers into the streets and nearly destabilized the French government. The uprising challenged both university authority and capitalism itself, forcing President Charles de Gaulle to secretly flee the country to secure military backing before calling new elections to restore order.

## Summary

In early May 1968, Paris became the epicenter of a youth revolt that would shake France to its foundations. What began as a student protest against overcrowded universities and outdated curricula on May 3 at the Sorbonne quickly spiraled into street battles with police, barricades in the Latin Quarter, and a generational reckoning with postwar French society. By May 13, the movement had spread beyond students—trade unions called a general strike, and millions of workers walked off the job across the country, from factories in the north to docks in Marseille.

The uprising was as much about ideology as immediate grievances. Students demanded meaningful university reform and questioned capitalism itself, influenced by Vietnam War protests, Marxist theory, and a broader sense that their elders' generation had built a stagnant, hierarchical society. The Situationist International, a radical artistic collective, had been circulating critiques of consumer culture in Paris for years; now their ideas found a mass audience in the streets. Workers, meanwhile, fought for better wages and conditions—strikes had been brewing for months under the surface.

By late May, the situation had become genuinely destabilizing. On May 27, unions and the government reached a tentative wage agreement, but student radicals rejected it as insufficient. President Charles de Gaulle, who had been silent through much of the crisis, suddenly disappeared on May29, flying secretly to Baden-Baden in West Germany to meet with General Jacques Massu and secure military backing. The move was a calculated show of force: de Gaulle returned to France and called snap legislative elections, betting that older voters would support him against perceived chaos.

The elections in June handed de Gaulle's party a landslide victory, effectively ending the uprising's political momentum. Students and workers had won some concrete gains—universities were reformed, wage increases were secured—but the structural changes they sought never materialized. De Gaulle remained in power until 1969, and France's rigid hierarchies largely survived intact. Yet May 1968 permanently altered French culture and politics. It demonstrated the power of coordinated mass action, inspired similar uprisings in other countries that summer, and created a generational mythology that shaped French intellectual and political life for decades.

## Key facts

- **Peak strike participation**: Approximately 10 million workers (roughly two-thirds of the French workforce) participated in the general strike
- **Duration of main uprising**: May 3–June 1968 (approximately 4 weeks of peak activity)
- **Initial trigger date**: May 3, 1968, when police occupied the Sorbonne
- **De Gaulle's secret departure**: May 29, 1968, to Baden-Baden, West Germany
- **Snap election date**: June 23–30, 1968
- **De Gaulle's party seats won**: 292 out of 485 seats in the National Assembly (landslide)
- **Wage increase agreement**: May 27 agreement included a 10% general wage raise and higher minimum wages
- **Major barricade location**: Latin Quarter, Paris—particularly Rue Gay-Lussac on May 10

## Timeline

- **1968-05-03** — Sorbonne occupied; street battles begin
  Police occupy the University of Paris at the Sorbonne in response to student protests over university conditions. Students retreat to the Latin Quarter, where barricades are erected and violent clashes with police ensue.
- **1968-05-10** — Night of the Barricades
  Intense overnight battles in the Latin Quarter, particularly on Rue Gay-Lussac. Police use tear gas and clubs; students throw cobblestones and burn cars. Hundreds are injured, shocking the French public and broadening support for the students.
- **1968-05-13** — General strike begins
  Major French trade unions, including the CGT and CFDT, call a nationwide general strike. Massive solidarity march in Paris draws between 500,000 and 1 million demonstrators. The uprising transforms from student protest into a broader workers' movement.
- **1968-05-15** — Factory occupations spread
  Workers begin occupying factories across France. By month's end, upward of 10 million workers are on strike, including auto plants, refineries, and mines.
- **1968-05-27** — Wage agreement reached but rejected
  Unions and the government agree to a 10% general wage increase and higher minimum wages. Trade union leaders present the deal to strikers at the Renault plant, but workers and radical students reject it as insufficient, deepening the crisis.
- **1968-05-29** — De Gaulle disappears; flees to West Germany
  President Charles de Gaulle secretly travels to Baden-Baden to meet General Jacques Massu and secure military support. His absence sends shockwaves through Paris and the international press, raising fears he may resign or that the government will collapse.
- **1968-05-30** — De Gaulle returns; calls snap elections
  De Gaulle returns to France and addresses the nation, announcing new legislative elections and condemning the uprising as a threat to order. He rallies his supporters with a show of governmental strength and military backing.
- **1968-06-23** — Legislative elections held
  French voters go to the polls in snap elections called by de Gaulle. His Gaullist party wins a commanding majority, with 292 out of 485 seats, effectively ending the political momentum of the uprising.
- **1968-06-30** — General strike officially called off
  Trade unions formally end the general strike. Workers return to factories and most workplaces resume normal operations. The immediate crisis has passed, though some localized strikes continue into July.

## Relationships

- **happened during**: assassination-martin-luther-king-jr — MLK's assassination in Memphis on April 4, 1968 occurred one month before May's uprising; both events unfolded in the same volatile year and shared anti-authoritarian, anti-imperialist sentiment, with Paris protests explicitly referencing global anti-war and racial justice struggles.
- **echoed**: cuban-missile-crisis — May 1968 students invoked the Cuban Revolution and anti-imperialism as moral templates; the 1962 crisis had crystallized Cold War tensions and Third World solidarity rhetoric that May activists recycled in opposition to Vietnam and NATO.

## Consequences

- **1969 — De Gaulle's Resignation**: Weakened by the May Crisis and a failed referendum on regional reform in April 1969, Charles de Gaulle resigned the presidency after a decade in power, ceding leadership to Georges Pompidou and ending an era of Gaullist dominance.
- **1970 — Expansion of French Higher Education**: The government moved quickly to decentralize universities and expand enrollment, implementing structural reforms that created new regional campuses and increased student representation in academic governance.
- **1972 — Shift in Labor-Management Relations**: The Matignon Accords of May 1968 had granted significant wage increases; subsequent years saw employers and unions develop more institutionalized bargaining frameworks, reducing the combative edge of French labor politics.
- **1970 — Radicalization of European Left Politics**: May 1968 inspired leftist movements across Western Europe—from Germany's Red Army Faction to Italy's Autonomia—creating a decade of militant student and worker activism that shaped the radical 1970s.
- **1973 — Cultural Permissiveness and Countercultural Ascendance**: The uprising accelerated France's embrace of sexual liberalization, drug policy debates, and anti-authoritarian values; by the early 1970s, French cinema, literature, and media reflected the countercultural sensibilities the uprisings had legitimized.

## Then vs now

- **French University Enrollment**: 1967: ~610,000 students (1967) → 2023: ~2.8 million students — Mass education expansion was a direct policy response to May 1968 overcrowding grievances.
- **Minimum Wage (France, nominal francs)**: 1968: ~1.27 francs per hour → 2024: €11.27 per hour (SMIC) — The Matignon Accords secured immediate 10% wage hikes; modern SMIC reflects cumulative post-1968 labor gains.
- **French Communist Party Membership**: 1968: ~380,000 members → 2023: ~60,000 members — May 1968 exposed the PCF's conservatism and accelerated its decline among youth and intellectuals.
- **Weekly Working Hours (France)**: 1968: ~46 hours (standard) → 2000: 35 hours (legal maximum) — The 35-hour workweek (Loi Aubry, 2000) fulfilled demands for leisure and worker dignity that animated 1968 strikes.

## Impact

The May 1968 uprising in Paris—a collision of student radicalism, labor militancy, and generational revolt—paralyzed France for weeks, nearly toppled Charles de Gaulle's government, and reverberated across the Western world as proof that postwar consensus could crack under pressure. What began as a protest against university overcrowding and police brutality exploded into a general strike that shut down factories, transport, and media, forcing Pompidou to negotiate wage increases and prompting de Gaulle himself to flee to Baden-Baden before returning to dissolve parliament and call snap elections.

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Canonical: https://recap.at/1968/may-1968-paris-uprising