Category
page 1Medieval male composers

Peter Abelard
French scholastic philosopher, theologian and preeminent logician (c.1079-1142)
Alfonso X of Castile and Leon
King of Castile from 1252 to 1284
Guillaume de Machaut
Medieval French composer and poet (c. 1300–1377)

Pérotin
Pérotin () was a composer associated with the Notre Dame school of polyphony in Paris and the broader musical style of high medieval music. He is credited with developing the polyphonic practices of his predecessor Léonin, with the introduction of three and four-part harmonies.
Adam de la Halle
French poet, composer and trouvère

Léonin
Léonin (also Leoninus, Leonius, Leo; ) was the first known significant composer of polyphonic organum. He was probably French, probably lived and worked in Paris at the Notre-Dame Cathedral and was the earliest member of the Notre Dame school of polyphony and the ars antiqua style who is known by name, thanks to the writer known as Anonymous IV. Though no further identification is certain, the name "Leoninus" and its Latin diminutive Leo have the French equivalents Léonin/Léo.

Hermann of Reichenau
German 11th-century Benedictine monk

Philippe de Vitry
French composer, music theorist and poet

Francesco Landini
Italian composer (c. 1325 – 1397)
Johannes Ciconia
Flemish composer and music theorist
Adam of Saint Victor
Medieval composer
John Koukouzeles
Byzantine composer; saint of the Eastern Orthodox Church
Jacopo da Bologna
Fourteenth-century Italian composer
Gautier de Coincy
French abbot, poet and musical arranger
Petrus de Cruce
Cleric and composer
Leonel Power
British composer and music theoretician
Jehan de Lescurel
French composer

Tuotilo
thumb|Two ivory tablets attributed to Tuotilo
Jacob Senleches
Franco-Flemish composer and harpist
Arnold de Lantins
Franco-Flemish composer

Iacobus de Ispania
Franco-Flemish music theorist
Marchetto da Padova
Italian music theorist
Matteo da Perugia
Medieval Italian composer

Franco of Cologne
German composer, musicologist, writer and music theorist
Gherardello da Firenze
composer
Giovanni da Cascia
Italian composer
Solage
Solage (; or Soulage), possibly Jean , was a French composer, and probably also a poet. He composed the most pieces in the Chantilly Codex, the principal source of music of the ars subtilior, the manneristic compositional school centered on Avignon at the end of the century.
John of Jenstein
Archbishop of Prague
Godric of Finchale
English merchant and saint
F. Andrieu
14th-century medieval French composer
Maestro Piero
Italian composer
Lorenzo da Firenze
Italian composer
Philippus de Caserta
Italian composer, musicologist and music theorist

Niccolò da Perugia
Italian composer

Hugo de Lantins
Burgundian musician
Jacobus Vide
Franco-Flemish composer
Paolo da Firenze
Italian composer and music theorist
Johannes Tapissier
French composer
Mekhitar of Ayrivank
Armenian composer
Bartolino da Padova
Italian composer
Antonio Zacara da Teramo
Italian composer active around 1400
Donato da Cascia
Italian composer
Martinus Fabri
Dutch musician

W. de Wycombe
British composer

Odo of Arezzo
composer
Piotr of Grudziądz
medieval composer
Kir Stefan the Serb
Serbian composer
Antonello da Caserta
Italian composer
Meister Rumelant
German poet and Minnesanger
Monk of Salzburg
German composer and author
Albertus Parisiensis
Medieval French composer
Grimace
composer

Gian Battista Casella
Italian composer and singer
Gautier de Dargies
French Trouvere
Gontier de Soignies
medieval trouvère and composer who was active from around 1180 to 1220
Byttering
Byttering (also Bytering, Bytteryng, or Biteryng; ) was an English composer during the stylistic transitional from medieval to Renaissance music. Five of his compositions have survived in the Old Hall Manuscript, where the musicologist Peter Wright contends they "form a small yet distinctive corpus of work notable for its technical ambition and musical accomplishment".
Záviš of Zápy
Czech poet, composer and roman catholic priest
Rudolf of St Trond
Wallon monk, cleric, musicologist and composer

Guilhem Ademar
troubadour
Vincenzo da Rimini
Italian composer