Hey man
Heymann is the family name of the following people:
- Andreas Heymann (* 1966), German-French biathlete
- Annette Heymann (* 1967), German volleyball player
- Aribert Heymann (1898-1946), German hockey player
- Arnold Heymann (1870–1950), Austrian architect
- Bernhard Heymann (1861–1933), German chemist
- Berthold Heymann (1870–1939), German state politician (Württemberg) (SPD)
- Birger Heymann (1943–2012), German composer and musician
- Bruno Heymann (1871–1943), German doctor and hygienist
- Carl Heymann (publisher) (1793–1862), German-Jewish publisher
- Carl Heymann (musician) (1854–1922), German pianist and piano teacher
- Carsten Heymann (* 1972), German biathlete
- Dietrich von Heymann (* 1935), German theologian, religious educator and alternative practitioner
- Dorothea Heymann-Reder (* 1963), German politician (Greens), MdL
- Emil Heymann (1878–1936), German neurosurgeon
- Ernst Heymann (1870–1946), German lawyer
- Friedel Heymann (1919–1945), German lieutenant and crime victim
- Friedrich August Thomas von Heymann (1740–1801), French major general, Prussian envoy in Munich
- Friedrich Moritz Heymann (1828–1870), German ophthalmologist
- Fritz Heymann (1897–1944), German journalist, writer and translator
- Georg Heymann (1885–1964), German lawyer
- Götz Heymann (* 1935), German production designer and film architect
- Günther Heymann (* 1917), German immunologist and physician
- Hans Werner Heymann (* 1946), German educational scientist and university professor
- Hella-Hilde Heymann (1885–1985), German-American photographer, painter and sculptor, see Lette Valeska
- Helma Heymann (* 1937), German-language writer for children's and youth literature
- Holger Heymann (* 1977), German politician (SPD)
- Hugo Heymann (1881–1938), German lawyer, entrepreneur and alleged Nazi victim
- Imke Heymann (* 1973), German politician (CDU), Mayor of Ennepetal
- Isaac Heymann (also: Isaak Heymann, called the Gnesener Chasan; 1829–1906), Dutch Chasan
- Jacob Heymann (1746–1818), head of the Dernau synagogue
- Jakob Heymann (* 1987), German singer, songwriter and cabaret artist
- Jenny Heymann (1890–1996), German educator (1939–47 exile in London), received the Otto Hirsch Medal in 1990
- Karl Heymann (psychologist) (1901–1975), German psychologist and anthroposophist
- Karl Gottlob Heymann (1825–1905), German conservative politician, Member of the State Parliament (Kingdom of Saxony)
- Klaus Heymann (* 1936), German entrepreneur ( Naxos )
- Lida Gustava Heymann (1868–1943), German women's rights activist
- Margarete Heymann (1899–1990), German ceramic artist
- Marianne Ahlfeld-Heymann (1905–2003), German-Israeli wood sculptor
- Matthias Heymann (* 1961), German technology, science and environmental historian
- Mendel Heymann (1683–1766), Sofer, community clerk and primary school teacher in Dessau
- Michael Heymann (* 1939), German pop singer and radio presenter in the GDR
- Moritz Heymann (1870–1937?), German painter, graphic artist and art teacher
- Philip Heymann (* 1932), American lawyer; Deputy US Attorney General
- Robert Heymann (1879–1946), German writer, dramaturge, screenwriter and film director
- Rudolf Heymann (1874–1947), German judge
- Sabine Heymann (* 1951), German cultural journalist, theater critic and translator
- Sebastian Heymann (* 1998), German handball player
- Stefan Heymann (1896–1967), German Jewish communist, editor, ambassador of the GDR and university professor
- Theodor Heymann (1853–1936), German entrepreneur and conservative politician, Member of the State Parliament (Kingdom of Saxony)
- Tomer Heymann (* 1970), Israeli film director
- Veit Heymann (1592–1651), Dresden councilor and mayor
- Victor Heymann (1842–1926), German lawyer and politician (Braunschweig)
- Volker Heymann (* 1960), German author, director and actor
- Walter Heymann (1882–1915), German poet
- Werner Richard Heymann (1896–1961), German composer and conductor
First name:
- Heymann Steinthal (also Chajim , Heinemann , Hermann or Heinrich ; 1823–1899), German philologist and philosopher
Part of company names:
- Heymann Motor Vehicle and Manufacturing Company , former American automobile manufacturer
See also: