Meier
Meier may refer to:
- A historical kind of bailiff in parts of the Low Countries.
People
- Meier, Barbara, German model, most known for winning the third cycle of Germany's Next Topmodel
- Meier, Bernd, German football goalkeeper
- Meier, Billy, UFO contactee
- Meier, Carl A., a Swiss psychiatrist, Jungian Psychologist
- Meier, Christian, several people of this name
- Meier, Deborah, the founder of the modern small schools movement
- Meier, Dutch, American baseball player
- Meiere, Hildreth (1892–1961), American artist
- Meier, Jim, film and television executive
- Meier, John, a German philologist and ethnographer
- Meier, John, Australian politician
- Meier, John H. former business associate of Howard Hughes, involved in Watergate
- Meier, John P., Catholic priest and Bible historian
- Meier, Julius L., a prominent businessman
- Meier, Kenneth J., American professor of political science
- Meier, Paul, medical statistician
- Meier, Megan, a notable teenage victim of cyberbullying
- Meier, Naomi, All-American Girls Professional Baseball League player
- Meier, Richard, an American architect
- Meier, Richard L., an American urban theorist
- Meier, Rob, an American football defensive tackle/defensive end for the Jacksonville Jaguars.
- Meier, Sarah, Swiss figure skater
- Meier, Sarah, supermodel
- Meier, Sid, computer game programmer and designer
- Meier, Urs, a retired Swiss football referee
- Meier, Waltraud, German mezzo soprano
Places
- Meiers Corners, a neighborhood in Staten Island, New York City, New York, United States
- Méier, a neighbourhood in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil
Other uses
- Sid Meier's Alien Crossfire, a computer game
- Sid Meier's Alpha Centauri, a computer game
- Sid Meier's Gettysburg, a computer game
- Sid Meier's Pirates!, a computer game
- Sid Meier's SimGolf, a computer game
- Meier & Frank, a former department store chain
- Meier & Frank Building, a historic commercial building associated with Meier & Frank department stores
- "Meier" [Meierei= (German) dairy-farm] is a common German surname and was used by Hermann Göring as a term of derision.