• Franziska Herzfeld

    1891-1939, German mathematician. She worked as a teacher at the École Normale in Nancy in French exile
  • Freud, Sigmund

    1856-1939, psychiatrist, professor of psychiatry in Vienna, founder of psychoanalysis, critic of religion. In 1938, Freud fled to London, where he committed suicide in 1939.
  • Frisch, Justinian

    1879–1949, Austrian lawyer, printshop director and advertising expert. Book producer for Bermann-Fischer Verlag, Vienna, from 1936. After a brief period of imprisonment in a concentration camp, he emigrated to Stockholm in 1938 and worked as a translator, proofreader and production manager for Bermann-Fischer. 1946 return to Austria, 1948 second emigration, this time to Britain
  • Fry, Varian

    1907-1967, American literary and political scientist and journalist, between August 1940 and August 1941, representative of the Emergency Rescue Committee in Marseille
  • Gabo, Naum

    (1890-1977), ) Constructivist Russian sculptor, painter, architect and designer, was a founding member of the Abstraction-Création art movement in Paris.



  • Garrigue Masaryk, Tomáš

    1850–1937, Czech philosopher, writer and politician, first President of Czechoslovakia from 1918 to 1935.
  • Gellhorn, Martha

    (1908-1998), American journalist, author, and war correspondent
  • Georg Friedrich Alexan

    (1901-1995), writer and journalist, who moved from Germany to Paris in 1931, was born Georg Kupfermann.
  • Georg Heintz

    1928-1987, German exile researcher, editor and publisher in Worms 
  • Géricault, Théodore

    1791–1824, French painter. His masterpiece is considered to be the large-scale painting Das Floss der Medusa. This depicts the historic shipwreck of the frigate Medusa and caused a scandal upon being exhibited in 1819 at the Paris Salon by addressing such a politically sensitive topic.