Well, as a direct response to a direct question, here's some excellent brands for piston pumps: Bosch Rexroth, Eaton Vickers, Parker Hannifin, Linde, Samhydraulik (part of Brevini), Kawasaki (KPM), Dynex-Rivett, Sauer-Danfoss, Moog, Oilgear, Rotary Power, Atos, Hawe, Duplomatic, Continental, Yuken ...
Here's some names that my colleagues might consider to be a little bit "second division" rather than "premier league" but I'm not sure that would always be the case: Huade, Metaris, Cassapa, Bondioli & Pavesi, Hydro-leduc, Hystar, Tokimec, Sunfab, Daikin, Nachi...
That's just off the top of my head and I'm not suggesting that each of these companies would have exactly what you want - BUT my "expert" advice to you is that you're barking up the wrong tree.
If the only filtration you have is your "suction filter" then that won't do much for you at all. The available pressure drop across a suction filter is so small that the filter has to be the size of a fridge in order to pass the required flow through an element fine enough to give the pump the proper protection. Chances are that what you do have is a "strainer" - something that could just about stop a wrench inadvertently left in the tank. If you are actually managing to clog this "strainer" then you must be pumping some extremely dirty fluid and your very short pump life is about right. If your strainer has a bypass valve then when it opens you have no filtration at all. Some piston pump manufacturers will void their warranty if you use a suction strainer - the reduction in the suction pressure at the inlet to the pump can cause a lot of damage (not just cavitation but also stresses trying to pull the slipper pads off the pistons in swash plate pumps).
If you are changing the element every month as a matter of course then that shows that you have no monitoring of the filter and that your maintenance efforts are somewhat unfocused and misdirected.
New oil "direct from the container" is not clean oil - it MUST MUST MUST be properly filtered prior to use.
Before you do anything else you should get your fluid analysed - your local hydraulic equipment supplier will be able to take a sample (there are special techniques involved in order to ensure the sample is properly representative of the fluid in the system). The particle count will tell you how clean your oil is - compare this with the pump manufacturer's recommendations. If the oil is too dirty then it doesn't matter how magnificent your new pump is, you will still get a short service life.
Or you could put on a cheap and cheerful gear pump and continue to run with dirty fluid. But it's not just the pump that suffers; you will find problems with your other valves and with the cylinder seals. The reliability of the whole machine will be less than it could be and you will be wasting energy as well. It's basically an economic argument: if the pump (and labor) is cheap and the unreliability of the machine doesn't cause any problems then run at the dirty end of the spectrum. The hydraulic components have no divine right to be run on clean oil, you own them so you can do what you like with them.
Remember that the original pump manufacturer sells to more customers than just you, if the problem really was with the quality of the pump then all of their customers would be having the same problem and the manufacturer would soon go out of business or shut down that product range because of poor sales or unprofitability. By the way, whose pump are you using now?
DOL