Piet Pieterszoon Hein (1577–1629), Dutch naval commander and folk hero
Piet Mondrian | Piet Hein | Birgit Hein | Piet Pieterszoon Hein | Hein-Direck Neu | Zwarte Piet | Piet Hein (Denmark) | Michael P. Hein | Hein Vergeer | Hein Verbruggen | Hein Mevissen | Tony Piet | Piet Zwart Institute | Piet van Heerden | Piet Uys | Piet Oudolf | Piet Kramer | Piet Joubert | Piet Cronjé | Piet Cronje | Moe Hein | Lee Hein | Jon Hein | Jeppe Hein | Hein ter Poorten | Hein Heckroth | Hans Hein Theodor Nysom | Franz Hein |
Fritz Hansen manufactures the works of designers such as Arne Jacobsen, Poul Kjærholm, Cecilie Manz, Hiromichi Konno, Piero Lissoni, Morten Voss, Bruno Mathsson, Todd Bracher, Hans J. Wegner, Hans S. Jakobsen, Kasper Salto, Pelikan Design, Jehs+Laub and Piet Hein.
Having made admiral by 1628, Lonck, in the service of the Dutch West Indies Company, joined Admiral Piet Hein in the Battle in the Bay of Matanzas, a naval battle during the Eighty Years' War in which a Dutch squadron was able to defeat and capture a Spanish treasure fleet.
Hein is the fourth son of Piet Hein, the Danish scientist, mathematician, inventor, designer, author, and poet who wrote the famed Grooks poetry collections and invented the Superegg and the Soma cube.
Piet Hein's gruks first started to appear in the daily newspaper "Politiken" shortly after the Nazi Occupation in April 1940 under the signature Kumbel Kumbell.
In 2006, Piet Hein Donner recorded a rap song together with Meester G to explain his point of view on the Dutch soft-drug policy.
Piet Hein Donner's father, André Donner, was a judge at the European Court of Justice in 1958-1979 and was part of the government commission that looked into Prince Bernhard of the Netherlands's dealing with the Lockheed Corporation.