Yes. During World War II, there were many Germans that went to other countries for their own safety.
Theodor Schieder has written: 'The expulsion of the German population from the territories east of the Oder-Neisse-line' -- subject(s): German Refugees, Refugees, German
Liberal German refugees who fled failed democratic revolutions and came to America were called 48ers.
ummm... i think its German 48ers
Bob Moore has written: 'Refugees from Nazi Germany in the Netherlands, 1933-1940' -- subject(s): Ethnic relations, German Jews, Jews, German, Political refugees
Tony Wohlmuth has written: 'La Partida' -- subject(s): Biography, German Jews, Immigrants, Jewish Refugees, Jews, Jews, German, Persecutions, Refugees, Jewish
They fled from our troops but we eventually caught them.
Herbert L. Schrader has written: 'No other way' -- subject(s): Medicine, German Refugees, Personal narratives, Refugees
Refugees can come from any part of the world, so there have been some refugees from European countries at different times.
Some do. There are, for example, a handful of German Jews who returned to Germany.
forty-eighters
Barbara Wolfenden has written: 'Little Holocaust survivors' -- subject(s): Biography, German Jews, Holocaust survivors, Jewish Refugees, Jews, Jews, German, Refugees, Jewish, Stoatley Rough School (Surrey, England)
Eugene R Sheppard has written: 'Leo Strauss and the politics of exile' -- subject(s): Biography, German Jews, Jewish Refugees, Jewish philosophers, Jews, Jews, German, Philosophy, Political science, Refugees, Jewish