I use the $1200ish Eizo CS2730, and it's excellent. It's a "real Eizo", part of their ColorEdge series (watch out for Eizo FlexScans, which are better than average business/gaming monitors, but not pro-level color displays). You don't get the built-in calibration sensor - but it is still internally calibratable, just like the more expensive CS series - just hook up a sensor to the USB port on the monitor and run Eizo's software. I'm not sure if your Colormunki will work, but a $150 Spyder will work just fine (within your budget, even with the Spyder)...
You'll get NEC Spectraview folks on here as well. I've never used one - the few I've seen at shows have looked excellent, and photographers I've talked to like them as well.
I also have an older (2013?) Dell UltraSharp, and, even though it claims to be full Adobe RGB and a color-accurate monitor, it won't calibrate terribly accurately (unlike Eizo and NEC, most Dell monitors, even the UltraSharp series, calibrate by adsjusting the output of your computer, not through an actual internal calibration table). Some Dell monitors may have true calibration, but require a Windows computer to access it (I've had Macs for many years, so Windows-only software doesn't matter to me).
BenQ is aiming at the Eizo/NEC market, and more seriously than Dell is - reviews are mixed at how well they're doing. Some reviews say "a real competitor to the big two, and cheaper", while others say "nice try".
Hoods are either included or available as an accessory for all monitors in this class. I don't have the accessory hood for my Eizo, although I may well buy it (surprisingly expensive - $150?) if I need to put the monitor someplace where glare is a real issue.
The one thing that very few of the "good" monitors are is 4K... The newer Dells are (my old one isn't), the NECs aren't, the relatively affordable Eizos aren't. For the most part, professional monitors are still running pre-Retina resolutions (1920x1200 at 24" and below, 2560x1440 at 27", 2560x1600 at 30"). The BenQ monitors are 4K, which is an advantage if they're otherwise comparable. Eizo has 4K monitors, but they're stunningly expensive - they have a 24" 4K ColorEdge for almost $3000 and 31" versions at $6000 and up. There is no 27" 4K ColorEdge, nor any version in the more affordable CS series at all.