Bartholomeus Meyburgh (c.1628–1708), also spelt Meijburch, Meyburch, and Meyburg, was a Dutch Golden Age painter known for his portraits and religious works.
Bartholomeus Meyburgh was born in Maassluis or The Hague, Netherlands, probably in 1628,[1] although some sources have suggested 1623,[2] 1624 and 1625.
[3] He worked in Maassluis until 1653, before travelling to and within Germany with his pupil Pierson, where they painted Swedish military commander Carl Gustav Wrangel in Bremervörde on their return journey.
Around 1661 Meyburgh moved to The Hague, where he married Anna Elisbeth Schortes in that year, and also became a member of the Confrerie Pictura.
[1] His style was influenced by Dordrecht portrait painter Nicolaes Maes; other contemporaneous Dutch artists who painted in similar styles include Jacobus Levecq, Adriaen Hanneman and Jan de Baen.