Freiburg, is an open examination college situated in Freiburg im Breisgau, Baden-Württemberg, Germany. 

The college was established in 1457 by the Habsburg line as the second college in Austrian-Habsburg region after the University of Vienna. Today, Freiburg is the fifth-most established college in Germany, with a long convention of showing the humanities, sociologies and regular sciences. 

The college is comprised of 11 resources and pulls in understudies from crosswise over Germany and from more than 120 different nations. Remote understudies constitute around 16% of aggregate understudy numbers. 

Named as one of world class colleges of Germany by scholastics, political delegates and the media, the University of Freiburg stands amongst Europe's top research and instructing organizations. With its long-standing notoriety of perfection, the college looks both to the past, to keep up its memorable scholastic and social legacy, and to the future, growing new routines and chances to address the issues of an evolving world. 

The University of Freiburg has been home to a portion of the best personalities of the Western convention, including such famous figures as Martin Heidegger, Hannah Arendt, Rudolf Carnap, David Daube, Johann Eck, Hans-Georg Gadamer, Friedrich Hayek, Edmund Husserl, Friedrich Meinecke, and Max Weber. Likewise, 19 Nobel laureates are associated with the University of Freiburg and 15 scholastics have been regarded with the most elevated German exploration prize, the Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz Prize, while working at the University of Freiburg