Wilhelm Germann (3 April 1840, in Gardelegen – 7 February 1902, in Meiningen) was a German Protestant theologian and missionary.
He studied theology in Erlangen and in 1864 became a member of the Lutheran Leipzig Mission.
In 1865 he was ordained as a minister, and later the same year, began work as a missionary in Madras, India.
In 1894 he was awarded with an honorary degree by the Faculty of Theology at Leipzig.
[2] He is best known as the author of biographies, especially works involving missionaries to India, such as Johann Phillip Fabricius (1865), Bartholomäus Ziegenbalg and Heinrich Plütschau (1868) and Christian Friedrich Schwarz (1870).