On May 3, 1968, students at Paris's Sorbonne University stage a large demonstration calling for more rights and an end to the conflict in Vietnam. Several hundred students were arrested and dozens were injured. By the end of the month, millions of workers were on strike, and France seemed to be on the brink of radical leftist revolution.
After the Algerian crisis of the 1950s, France entered a period of stability in the 1960s. The French empire was abolished, the economy improved, and President Charles de Gaulle was a popular ruler. Discontent lay just beneath the surface, however, especially among young students, who were critical of France’s outdated university system and the scarcity of employment opportunity for university graduates.
In the aftermath of the Sorbonne incident, courses at the university were suspended, and students took to the streets of the Latin Quarter (the university district of Paris) to continue their protests. On May 6, battles between the police and students in the Latin Quarter led to hundreds of injuries. On the night of May 10, students set up barricades and rioted in the Latin Quarter. Nearly 400 people were hospitalized, more than half of them police. Leftist students began calling for radical economic and political change in France, and union leaders planned strikes in support of the students. In an effort to defuse the crisis by returning the students to school, Prime Minister Georges Pompidou announced that the Sorbonne would be reopened on May 13.