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1968 in France

1968
in
France
Decades:
See also:Other events of 1968
History of France  • Timeline  • Years

Events from the year 1968 in France were categorized by protests and general unrest across the country as part of the many protests of 1968 that occurred across the globe in that year.

Incumbents

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Events

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  • 27 January – French submarine sinks in the Mediterranean with 52 men on board.
  • 9 March – A Douglas DC-6B (43748) of L'Armée de L'Air flies into a hill on Réunion, killing 16 of the 17 occupants. The plane, which was headed from Saint-Denis to Djibouti, crashed due to an incorrect takeoff procedure causing it to fly inland instead out of towards the ocean. Among the passengers was General Ailleret, the chief of defence staff. This crash is the deadliest to occur on Réunion.[1]
  • 22 March – Mouvement du 22 Mars: Daniel Cohn-Bendit and seven other students occupy administrative offices of the new Nanterre campus of the University of Paris, setting in motion a chain of Mai 68 events that will lead France to the brink of revolution.
  • 23 April – Surgeons at the Hôpital de la Pitié, Paris, perform Europe's first heart transplant operation.
  • May – Mai 68: Student strikes develop into widespread and unprecedented protests over poor working conditions and a rigid educational system, which threaten to bring down the government.
  • 2 May – Mai 68: Authorities close the Nanterre campus of the University of Paris and the focus of protest moves to the Sorbonne.
  • 6 May – Mai 68: Members of the Union Nationale des Étudiants de France and supporters march and begin battling with police on the streets of Paris.
  • 13 May – Mai 68: The major left trade union federations, the Confédération Générale du Travail (CGT) and the Force Ouvrière (CGT-FO), call a 1-day general strike and join student protesters in a million-strong march through the streets of Paris.[2]
  • 14 May – Mai 68: Workers at the Sud Aviation aircraft factory near Nantes begin a sit-down strike, becoming "the very first of the French factories to go on strike" and setting a precedent that would soon spread to the Renault automobile factories, then to western France and eventually to the entire nation.[3]
  • 16 May – Mai 68: Employees seize control of the automobile factories owned by the nationalized Renault company, taking control at Boulogne-Billancourt, Rouen, Le Havre, Le Mans and Flins.[4] Workers strike at two factories at Lyon, several newspapers in Paris, and shut down Orly Airport at Paris.[5]
  • 27 May – Mai 68: Grenelle agreements concluded, giving a 35% increase in the guaranteed minimum wage and 10% increase in average real wages, but are rejected by trade unions.[6]
  • 29 May – Mai 68: President de Gaulle leaves Paris without telling his prime minister, Georges Pompidou, where he is going – which is in fact to the headquarters of the French Forces in Germany at Baden-Baden to assure himself of military support.[7]
  • 30 May – Mai 68: With hundreds of thousands marching on the streets of Paris, President de Gaulle calls an election, which has the effect of calming the situation.[7]
  • 23–30 June – 1968 French legislative election: The Gaullist Union pour la défense de la République (UDR) becomes the first party in French political history to obtain an absolute majority in the National Assembly.[8] George Pompidou leads the party through the campaign but resigns as prime minister afterwards and is succeeded on 10 July by Maurice Couve de Murville. The Mai 68 public unrest subsides.
  • 24 August – France and weapons of mass destruction: Canopus (nuclear test): France explodes its first hydrogen bomb over Fangataufa atoll near Moruroa (at this time known as Mururoa) in French Polynesia, thus becoming the world's fifth nuclear power. French tests here lead to widespread protest from other Pacific nations.
  • 11 September – Air France Flight 1611 crashes into the Mediterranean off Nice, killing all 95 on board.
  • 12 September – Launch of the Peugeot 504, successor the 404, available as a four-door five-seater saloon or five-door seven-seater estate, both with rear-wheel drive.[9]
  • 10 December – René Cassin is presented with the Nobel Peace Prize.

Arts and literature

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Sport

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Births

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January to March

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April to June

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July to September

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October to December

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Full date unknown

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Deaths

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January to March

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April to June

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July to September

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October to December

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See also

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References

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  1. ^ "ASN Aircraft accident Douglas DC-6B 43748 Saint Denis". aviation-safety.net. Retrieved 11 August 2023.
  2. ^ "May 1968: The protests that changed the world". ABC News. 11 May 2018. Retrieved 27 March 2025.
  3. ^ Ross, Kristin (2008). May '68 and its Afterlives. University of Chicago Press. p. 48.
  4. ^ "French Workers Follow Students, Seize Factories". Pittsburgh Post-Gazette May 17, 1968 p. 1.
  5. ^ "Paris Workers Rebuff Students". Pittsburgh Press. May 17, 1968 p. 1.
  6. ^ Seidman, Michael (1993). "Workers in a Repressive Society of Seductions". French Historical Studies. 18. Duke University Press: 264. doi:10.2307/286966. ISSN 0016-1071. JSTOR 286966. OCLC 5548695526.
  7. ^ a b Dogan, Mattei (1984). "How Civil War Was Avoided in France". International Political Science Review. 5 (3): 245–277. doi:10.1177/019251218400500304. JSTOR 1600894. S2CID 144698270.
  8. ^ "France" (PDF). Inter-Parliamentary Union.
  9. ^ "Peugeot 504 Prototypes". Garage24.net. 12 September 1968. Retrieved 16 April 2011.
  10. ^ "The Nobel Prize in Chemistry 2020". NobelPrize.org. Retrieved 7 October 2020.
  11. ^ Randel, Don Michael (1996). The Harvard Biographical Dictionary of Music. Cambridge: Belknap Press of Harvard University Press. p. 209. ISBN 978-0-67437-299-3.