Category
page 19th-century composers

Leo VI the Wise
Byzantine Emperor

Kassia
Kassia, Cassia, Kassiane, or Kassiani (, ; – c.865) was a Byzantine-Greek composer, hymnographer and poet. She holds a unique place in Byzantine music as the only known woman whose music appears in the Byzantine liturgy. Approximately fifty of her hymns are extant, most of which are stichera, though at least 26 have uncertain attribution. The authenticity issues are due to many hymns being anonymous, and others ascribed to different authors in different manuscripts. She was an abbess of a convent in the west of Constantinople.

Notker the Stammerer
Benedictine monk and musician

Hucbald
thumb|Hucald's Musica, page 125 in the Codex 169(468) from the Abbey library of Saint Gall
Hucbald ( – 20 June 930; also Hucbaldus or Hubaldus) was a Benedictine monk active as a music theorist, poet, composer, teacher, and hagiographer. He was long associated with Saint-Amand Abbey, so is often known as Hucbald of St Amand. Deeply influenced by Boethius' De Institutione Musica, Hucbald's (De) Musica, formerly known as De harmonica institutione, aims to reconcile ancient Greek music theory and the contemporary practice of Gregorian chant with the use of many notated examples. Among the leading
Otfrid of Weissenburg
Carolingian priest and poet

Tuotilo
thumb|Two ivory tablets attributed to Tuotilo
Stephen of Liège
Roman Catholic bishop, hagiographer, church music composer