Note:
(a) "Johannes Vermeer [1632 – 1675] * * * his great contemporary, Rembrandt van Rijn * * * the newly reopened and revamped Rembrandt House Museum, where he lived and worked for close to 20 years. * * * The stately three-story red-brick building was erected in 1606 * * * His wife, Saskia, died here in 1642, just nine months after the birth of their son Titus"
(i) Rembrandt House Museum https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rembrandt_House_Museum
("Between 1639 and 1658, the house was occupied by the well-known Dutch painter Rembrandt van Rijn")
(ii) Rembrandt van Rijn
(A) Rembrandt (given name) https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rembrandt_(given_name)
In Dutch:
the letter j (just the same in German language) is pronounced like y in English.
"The letter 'y' is not used in originally Dutch words; it only appears in borrowed words, eg baby, derby, and lyceum." from the Web.
Pay attention, in the preceding Wiki page, to the letter "ij," which is a vowel -- a diphthong, to be exact – which is pronounced, to make it SIMPLE, like eye in English.
In linguistics, there is this term "phonetic language," of which English is not one.
"Some languages are 'phonetic. That means you can look at a written word and know how to pronounce it. Or you can hear a word and know how to spell it. With phonetic languages, there is a direct relationship between the spelling and the sound." from the Web.
"Spanish, Russian, German, and Korean are very phonetic languages." from the Web.
"Dutch is a phonetic language." from the Web.
(iii) Saskia https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Saskia
("is a Germanic feminine given name. * * * it originally meant 'a Saxon woman' (metathesis [here meaning reversing 'ks' in x to 'ks'] of [another Germanic feminine given name] 'Saxia')
Saxia is said to be derived from Sax, Middle English proper noun, whose Modern English descendant is Saxon (a member of the tribe that came to England).
(iv) Titus (praenomen) https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Titus_(praenomen)
(b) "creation of masterpieces like 'The Night Watch' "
(i) Do not read the en.wikipedia.org for this painting, which does not explain "daylight" in that page, despite the title of the painting.
That Wikipedia.org does say, "It is in the collection of the Amsterdam Museum but is prominently displayed in the Rijksmuseum [national museum, also located in Amsterdam] as the best-known painting in its collection."
Quote: "The companies of kloveniers [Dutch for musketeers] were armed with an early type of musket known as an arquebus, known in Dutch as a * * * klover (from the French couleuvrine), hence the name kloveniers. * * * The Kloveniersdoelen was one of three doelens (shooting ranges) for the Amsterdam schutterij (civic guard). The other two shooting ranges were the Handboogdoelen and Voetboogdoelen")
Click the two and you will know what the first part of these two words mean in Dutch.
(c) a modern wing was added next door, affording exhibition space, a gift shop and lobby entry to the restored house itself"