Since the Middle Age this riverside quarter has
been dominated by the Sorbonne, and acquired its name from
the early latin-speaking students. It dates back to the
Roman town across the Ile de la Cité. In 1215 the
Pope approved the establishment of a university on the left
bank of the Seine in Paris. Students and teachers alike
settled in the area and since Latin was the official language
of education at that time, the area came to be called the
Latin Quarter.
The area is generally associated with artists and intellectual
this is mainly due to the thousands
of students living around.
But the place also has a history of political unrest : In
1871, the Place Saint Michel became the center of the Paris
Commune, and in may 1968, it was a site of student uprising.
Today the eastern half has become sufficiently chic, however,
to house members of the French Establishment.
The place contains many of the Paris monuments, museums
and gardens, ranging from the brand-new Institut du Monde
Arabe to the Middle Age Musée de Cluny, or the Muséum
National d'Histoire Naturelle in the Jardin des Plantes.
How to get there
Metro line 1 or 10 : Saint Germain des Prés, Mabillon