The Flute sonata in B minor (HWV 367b) is a work for flute and basso continuo, however the sonata was originally composed (c. 1712) by George Frideric Handel as a Recorder sonata in D minor (HWV 367a).
Other catalogues of Handel's music have referred to the work as HG xxvii, 32; and HHA iv/3,42.
9" in 1730 in an unauthorised and "disgracefully botched" edition—in fact by John Walsh of London but with a forged title page claiming Jeanne Roger of Amsterdam as the publisher—in which it was transposed to B minor for flute from its original key of D minor, and with its third and fourth movements omitted.
The work is the most developed and expansive of all Handel's sonatas that can be said to be for the flute.
A typical performance of the work takes about fourteen and a half minutes.