Event class: france, returned, germany, left, fled, family, exile, return, united states, went
normalize
de-normalize
Events with high posterior probability
Merziye Feriqi | In 1984, she and her husband Nasser Razazi left Iran and sought refuge in Sweden. |
Rolf Singer | Persecution by the Spanish authorities on behalf of the German government forced Singer to leave Spain for France in 1934. |
Jesaya Nyamu | Nyamu fled into exile with SWAPO in 1964. |
Johanna Kinkel | Following the 1848 Revolutions she was forced to abandon Germany and flee to London. |
Baron Omar Rolf von Ehrenfels | After a trip to India 1932 - 33'' he went back to become the co - editor of Gerechtigkeit (justice) in Vienna, a journal which stood for the integrity of Abyssinia (Ethiopia) and for Human Rights when Italy invaded that country.'' |
Richard Wagner | The political ban that had been placed on Wagner in Germany after he had fled Dresden was fully lifted in 1862. |
Jos? Antonio Aguirre (politician) | When the United States decided to back Franco in 1952 he went to France anew where the Basque Government in exile was established. |
Thrasyvoulos Tsakalotos | In 1942, he managed to escape the country and reach Egypt, where the Greek government in exile resided. |
Antoine Bibesco | The World War II years were spent in Romania where his wife died (in 1945) and when, after the war, his estates were confiscated by the communists he left his country, never to return. |
Egon Kisch | Following the Munich Agreement of 1938 and the subsequent Nazi occupation of Bohemia six months later, Kisch was unable to return to the country of his birth. |
Paul Kagame | Approximately two million Hutu lived as refugees in neighbouring countries until 1996, when Kagame forced them to return home. |
Hassan Alavikia | In January 1979, he and his wife left Iran to visit their daughters in Paris, France where they were studying ; however, due to the turmoil and start of the Islamic revolution, they were unable to return to Iran. |
Raoul Gunsbourg | Assisted by the members of the French Resistance, Gunsbourg fled to nearby Switzerland, nearly escaping the arrest and possible execution by the Nazi s who occupied Monaco in 1943 and began the deportation of the Jewish population. |
Prince Alexander of Belgium | After the war, the Royal Family was unable to return to Belgium and was forced to spend some years in Swiss exile before finally being able to return to Belgium in 1950 after a national referendum. |
Hans Marchwitza | In 1938, he attempted to cross from Spain to France but was arrested and detained by the French. |
Andrei Tarkovsky | In January 1986, he began treatment in Paris and was joined there by his son, who was finally allowed to leave the Soviet Union. |
Gustav Struve | In 1863, a general amnesty was issued to all those who had been involved in the revolutions in Germany, and Struve returned to Germany. |
Arpiar Arpiarian | In 1896, the Hamidian massacres began and in order to escape the fate of other Armenians, he fled Constantinople to London. |
Carlos Altamirano | After the anticommunist coup of 11 September 1973, he first fled to Cuba and later lived in the GDR. |
Eddie Rosner | Sensing that the end is near, he applied to the Soviet authorities for permission to immigrate to his birthplace, and was allowed to return to his native Berlin in 1973. |
Niels Bohr | In September 1943, word reached Bohr and his brother Harald that they were about to be arrested by the Germans. |
Mohieddin Fikini | In 1929, the Italians launched their offensive against Fezzan, so his father left Fezzan with his family for Algeria via Ghat, and at last reached Tunisia, and chose to live at Gabès. |
Kurt Baier | In 1938 he had to abandon his studies, and went to the United Kingdom as a refugee, where he was interned as a'' friendly enemy alien'' and sent to Australia where he began studying philosophy. |
Adolf Eichmann | In 1948 Eichmann obtained a landing permit for Argentina and false identification under the name of'' Ricardo Klement'' through Bishop Alois Hudal, a Nazi Austrian cleric then residing in Italy. |
M?r Perczel | In 1867 Perczel was allowed to return to Hungary and went back to Bonyhád, his birthplace. |
Helmut Pfeiffer | In April 1945 he unsuccessfully attempted to flee with them to Sweden. |
Georgi Sava Rakovski | In 1841, he was sentenced to death whilst involved in revolutionary plans against the Turks, but thanks to a Greek friend, managed to escape to France. |
Xhemal Aranitasi | On April 6, 1939, on the eve of the invasion of Albania by the Italian Army, Aranitasi left the country and settled in Turkey, where he lived until the end of his life. |
Robert Vorhoelzer | On the eve of WWII, Vorhoelzer emigrated to Turkey, from where he has been expelled in 1941 due to an allegation of espionage for Germany. |
Abdelbaset al-Megrahi | On his return to Libya, al-Megrahi was initially hospitalized but was allowed to leave on 2 November 2009, taking up residence in a villa in Tripoli. |
Eri Jabotinsky | With Betar and the party's military wing, Irgun, he helped coordinate illegal Jewish immigration into Palestine ; he was temporarily arrested by the British authorities in 1940, and upon his release he moved to the United States, where his father died suddenly about the same time. |
Isaiah Oggins | As of August 26, 1926, when he applied for his U. S. passport, Oggins had joined the Soviet underground and was readying for his first overseas assignment in probably Germany and France. |
Agust? Chalaux i de Subir? | In 1939 he went into exile to Paris, where he was caught up by Second World War. |
Robert Clunie | When Germany invaded Poland in September, 1939, Clunie developed melancholia and was unable to paint for a year. |
Gottfried Kinkel | He was eventually transferred to Spandau in Berlin, where his friend and former student Carl Schurz helped him escape the prison at Spandau and reach London, England in November 1850. |
Alfred Junge | After a brief spell spent interned as an enemy alien on the Isle of Man, Junge returned to London where he began work on King Vidor's The Citadel (1938). |
David Riazanov | In 1900, Riazanov went into exile. |
Emil Frey | Frey's family provided refuge for Friedrich Hecker when he fled the repression following the revolution in Germany in 1848. |
Heinz Kiwitz | In 1937, with help from Rowohlt, he managed to flee to Copenhagen, Denmark, where he met Bertolt Brecht. |
Raoul Wallenberg | When Wallenberg reached the Swedish legation in Budapest in July 1944, the campaign against the Jews of Hungary had already been underway for several months. |
Luciano Gaucci | After Perugia fell bankrupt in 2005, the Italian magistrature started an inquiry on him and his sons Alessandro and Riccardo ; after such events, Luciano Gaucci escaped to Santo Domingo, Dominican Republic where he stayed four years on hiding. |
Sufi Amba Prasad | A crackdown later forced him to flee India for Nepal in 1907, where he was granted asylum by Deva Shamsher Jang Bahadur Rana. |
Fyodor Lidval | In 1918, ruined by the revolution, he was forced to emigrate to his family in Stockholm, ending the most fruitful period of his work which is connected with St. Petersburg, although he designed several buildings in Stockholm. |
Sepp Janko | Janko was able to escape from the Communist onslaught in late 1944 to Austria. |
Bryher | Starting that year, her home in Switzerland became a'' receiving station'' for refugees ; she helped more than 100 people escape Nazi persecution before she was forced to flee herself in 1940. |
Alexandre do Nascimento | In 1961, with the outbreak of the War of Independence, Nascimento was forced to enter exile in Lisbon. |
Knut Moe | Rasmussen was later captured by Gestapo, whereas Moe and Raaby fled in May 1944 to England via Sweden and Finland. |
Francisco Vidal y Barraquer | When the Revolution of 1936 broke out, the Cardinal found his life in danger and fled to Poblet, Barcelona, and then the Carthusian monastery of Farneta in Lucca, Italy. |
Nikolai Valentinov | In 1903, after his release from yet another term of imprisonment, he went into exile to Switzerland. |
Vladimirs Petrovs | When Nazi Germany invaded the Soviet Union on 22 June 1941, Petrovs was unable to return to his wife and daughter at home in Latvia. |
Dhammalok Mahasthavir | Dhammalok spent his exile in India, Tibet and Bhutan, and returned to Kathmandu on 5 June 1946 after the ban was lifted. |
Agn?s Humbert | A few days after the fall of Paris on 14 June 1940, having fled Paris to be with her mother at the house of her cousin Daisy Drew at Vicq-sur-Breuilh, by chance she heard an appeal by General de Gaulle on the BBC's Radio France encouraging the people of France to continue the struggle against the occupying Germans and the Vichy government. |
Frans Wildenhain | In March 1940, she was able to emigrate to the U. S. (just two months in advance of the German invasion of Holland), but he (a non-Jewish German citizen) was not allowed to follow her. |
Jeyhun Hajibeyli | Due to the political events that took place in Baku and throughout Azerbaijan in 1920, he was not able to return to Baku and had to live out his life in France never to return. |
Arminda Schutte | Given the arrival of Communism in the island, she left Cuba in 1963 with her widowed mother via Mexico with the goal of seeking political asylum in the United States. |
Pieter Jeremias Blignaut | In January 1901, gravely ill, he was issued with a laissez-passer to travel to his farm Secretarispan near Bloemfontein, where he stayed for the remainder of the war, effectively on leave from his position as Government Secretary. |
Cornelius Adebayo | In 1996, after finding he was scheduled to be arrested again, he fled the country in disguise for a brief exile in Canada. |
Hedda Sterne | In 1941 she escaped a certain death from Nazi encroachment during World War II when she fled to New York to be with Frederick. |
Nadia Boulanger | Waiting to leave France till the last moment before the invasion and occupation, Boulanger arrived in New York (via Madrid and Lisbon) on 6 November 1940. |
Eugene Bullard | After the German invasion of France in May 1940, Bullard fled from Paris with his daughters. |
Fritz Kortner | With the coming to power of the Nazis, the Jewish Kortner fled Germany in 1933, emigrating first to Vienna, then to Great Britain, and finally to the United States, where he found work as a character actor and theater director. |
Adrienne Clarkson | It was only through his Canadian government connections that her father gained his family the opportunity in 1942 to flee the occupation to Canada, as part of the repatriating of Canadian government staff from the fallen city. |
Xavier Zubiri | When civil war broke out in Spain in 1936, Zubiri moved to Paris. |
Tina Modotti | In April 1939, following the collapse of the Republican movement in Spain, Modotti left Spain with Vidali and returned to Mexico under a pseudonym. |
Yahya Kemal Beyatl? | To avoid getting arrested, he escaped to Paris, France in 1903. |
Blanche Selva | In 1936 she left Barcelona because of the Spanish Civil War and lived for a while in Marseille, then Moulins, Allier, and Saint-Saturnin, Puy-de-Dôme, Auvergne. |
Patricio Manns | The military coup of September 11, 1973 found him in Chile and it was only due to international diplomatic mediation that he was able to safely leave his country. |
Knut Moe | When World War II reached Norway in 1940 with the invasion and occupation of Norway by Nazi Germany, Moe joined the Norwegian resistance movement. |
Victor Serge | After France was invaded by Germany in 1940, Serge, together with his son, Vlady Kibalchich, managed to escape. |
Ronald Moody | In 1940, two days before Paris was fell to the Germans, Moody was forced to flee the city, abandoning his sculptures. |
Franz Carl Weiskopf | When Czechoslovakia fell to the invading Germans in October 1938, the newspaper was forced to shut down, and Weiskopf fled to Paris. |
Edith Hahn Beer | Her mother had been deported to Poland two weeks before Hahn was able to return to Vienna in 1942. |
Whitney Straight | However he escaped on 22 June 1942 and with the aid of the French Resistance reached safety in Gibraltar. |
Ernst Kitzinger | Kitzinger, although he had left Germany because he was Jewish, was interned in 1940 as an'' enemy alien'' (having German nationality and background) with many others in similar circumstances. |
Fritz Eberhard | After the Nazi Party seized power in 1933, Rauschenplat was forced to go underground because of an arrest warrant and took the name'' Fritz Eberhard''. |
Karl August Wittfogel | When Hitler came to power in 1933, Wittfogel tried to escape to Switzerland, but was arrested and interned in prisons and concentration camps. |
Max Beer | The coming of World War I made Beer's position in Great Britain untenable and he was deported in 1915 as a so-called'' enemy alien.'' |
Ossip Bernstein | He fled to Spain after the capitulation of France (Battle of France) in Summer 1940. |
Simon Dubnow | On the initiative of a Latvian Jewish refugee activist in Stockholm and with help from the local Jewish community in Sweden, Dubnow was granted a visa to Sweden in the summer of 1940 but for unknown reasons he never used it. |
Edith Kurzweil | When the German army invaded Belgium, in May 1940, she managed to flee to southern France with the 100 children of the home d’enfants, and then, alone with her younger brother, through Spain and Portugal to meet her parents in New York. |
Klaus Croissant | He was released under bail and fled to France on July 10, 1977, before being stopped in Paris on September 30. |
Fabio Grobart | After in 1922 entering the Young Communist League of Poland, and additional Communist activities he may have been sentenced to death and this may have obliged him to leave Poland to settle in Cuba. |
Bernt Ivar Eidsvig | In the summer of 1991, Mr Eidsvig left his service in Norway and was received as a novice with the Canons of Stift Klosterneuburg in Austria, just outside Vienna. |
Ferdinand Walsin Esterhazy | On 1 September 1898, having shaved off his mustache, he fled France, via Brussels, for the relative safety of the United Kingdom. |
Stylianos Kyriakides | Kyriakides, who narrowly escaped execution during World War II during the Nazi occupation of Greece, had n't run in six years when he came to Boston in 1946, with the help of Greek-American benefactors. |
Zvi Yehuda Kook | With the outbreak of World War I in 1914, he was arrested as a citizen of the Russian Empire, the enemy country, but was soon released and joined his father in Switzerland, where he was stuck due to the war. |
Erich Mendelsohn | De La Warr Pavilion in Bexhill on Sea In the spring of 1933, in the wake of growing antisemitism and the rise of the Nazis in Germany, he fled to England. |
Karol Ziemski | After the Uprising, he stayed in different German POW camps, in May 1945 was freed by the Allies and settled in London, where was a member of the Polish Government in Exile. |
Manuel Carbonell | In 1959, Carbonell fled Cuba where he could no longer live under a totalitarian regime. |
Savitri Devi | After World War II, she travelled to Europe in late 1945 under the name Savitri Devi Mukherji as the wife of an Indian national using a British passport. |
Chico Whitaker | In 1966, fleeing political persecution in the country, he went into live in exile with his wife and four children. |
Jon Bilbao | Thanks to his American passport he was not imprisoned but in 1960 he was declared'' persona non grata'' and expelled from the country. |
Mohammed Nabi Yusufi | Yusufi fled Afghanistan with his family shortly after the Russia ns invaded Afghanistan in 1979. |
Joseph Grew | Ambassador Grew was interned for nine months by the Japanese government, but he was released to return to the United States on August, 1942. |
Archduke Felix of Austria | As a result he was banned from entering Austria except for a brief three-day stay in 1989 in order to attend his mother's funeral. |
Mohammad Reza Pahlavi | Cuernavaca, -LSB- -LSB- Mexico in 1979 -RSB- -RSB- During his second exile, Mohammad Reza Pahlavi traveled from country to country seeking what he hoped would be temporary residence. |
Alec Reeves | Following the invasion of France by Germany in 1940, Reeves escaped over the Spanish border and then made his way back to England aboard a cargo ship. |
Giorgi Mazniashvili | In 1923, during the Red Terror, he was arrested and exiled to Persia whence he moved to France. |
Bram van Velde | When the Spanish Civil War started in 1936, Lilly van Velde died in a hospital and Bram van Velde fled back to Marseille with several of his canvases made on Majorca. |
Hank Wardle | From Switzerland, Wardle was smuggled into Vichy France, through Spain and finally reached British-held Gibraltar in early 1944. |