Benedictus BunsW
Benedictus Buns

Benedictus Buns, Benedictus à sancto Josepho, was a priest and composer.

Jacob van EyckW
Jacob van Eyck

Jonkheer Jacob van Eyck was a Dutch nobleman and musician. He was one of the best-known musicians in the Netherlands in the seventeenth century, working as a carillon player, organist, recorder virtuoso, and composer.

Willem de FeschW
Willem de Fesch

Willem de Fesch was a virtuoso Dutch violone player and composer.

Pieter HellendaalW
Pieter Hellendaal

Pieter Hellendaal was a Dutch composer, organist and violinist.

Joachim van den HoveW
Joachim van den Hove

Joachim van den Hove was a Flemish/Dutch composer and a lutenist. He composed works for lute solo and for lute and voice. Moreover, he wrote many arrangements for lute of Italian, French, and English vocal and instrumental music, and of Flemish/Dutch folk music. Van den Hove disputes with Adriaensen and Vallet the distinction of being the most important representative of 17th century Dutch lute music.

Constantijn HuygensW
Constantijn Huygens

Sir Constantijn Huygens, Lord of Zuilichem, was a Dutch Golden Age poet and composer. He was secretary to two Princes of Orange: Frederick Henry and William II, and the father of the scientist Christiaan Huygens.

Gisbert SteenwickW
Gisbert Steenwick

Gisbert Steenwick was a Dutch composer, organist, and carillonneur. He was born in Arnhem, where already at 21 he was a member of the local collegium musicum Caecilia. In January 1665 Steenwick was appointed organist of St Eusebiuskerk in Arnhem, and on 22 October that year he was made municipal organist. He left Arnhem in 1674 and went to Kampen, where on 6 June 1674 he was appointed organist and carillonneur at the Bovenkerk. He died some five years later in Kampen, at the age of 37.

Unico Wilhelm van WassenaerW
Unico Wilhelm van Wassenaer

Unico Wilhelm, Count van Wassenaer Obdam was a Dutch nobleman who was a diplomat as well as a composer. He reorganized the Bailiwick of Utrecht of the Teutonic Order. His most important surviving compositions are the Concerti Armonici, which until 1980 had been misattributed to the Italian composer Giovanni Battista Pergolesi (1710–1736) and to Carlo Ricciotti (1681–1756).