Wilhelm Röpke, The solution of the German problem, New York: G.P. Putnam's Sons, 1947.
Röpke's opposition to the German Nazi regime led him (with his family) in 1933 to emigrate to Istanbul, Turkey, where he taught until 1937, before accepting a position at the Institute of International Studies in Geneva, where he lived until his death, in 1966.
Wilhelm II, German Emperor | Wilhelm II | Wilhelm Reich | Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz | Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel | Wilhelm Keitel | Friedrich Wilhelm Joseph Schelling | Wilhelm Furtwängler | Karl Wilhelm Friedrich Schlegel | Wilhelm Wundt | Wilhelm Sasnal | Wilhelm Kempff | Wilhelm Busch | Wilhelm Westphal | Wilhelm von Knyphausen | Wilhelm von Bode | Wilhelm Steinitz | Wilhelm Schlenk | Wilhelm Heinrich Roscher | Wilhelm Gesenius | Wilhelm Canaris | Prince Wilhelm of Hesse-Philippsthal-Barchfeld | Friedrich Wilhelm Freiherr von Bülow | Franz Wilhelm Junghuhn | Carl Wilhelm Siemens | Wilhelm von Tegetthoff | Wilhelm von Schütz | Wilhelm von Humboldt | Wilhelm Solheim | Wilhelm Schüchter |
Wilhelm Röpke, Alfred Müller-Armack and Alexander Rüstow were not members of the Freiburg School but did provide, together with the Freiburg School, the foundations of Ordoliberalism.