Ahmad ibn Muhammad al-Maydani

[2] He was a native of Nishapur (Arabic Naysābūr) and took his surnames from his place of residence off the maydān Ziyād.

He was educated in Nishapur under the Qurʾānic scholars Abu ʾl-Ḥasan al-Wāḥidī (died 1076), Yaʿqūb ibn Aḥmad al-Kurdī and ʿAlī al-Mujāshiʿī al-Farazdaqī.

[1] Fifteen works by al-Maydānī are known, of which the most famous is the paremiological Majmaʿ al-amthāl, which remains the "most popular collection of classical Arabic proverbs".

[1] It was produced around the same time as al-Zamakhsharī's collection in response to a request by the majlis (council) of Muntajab al-Mulk Abū ʿAlī Muḥammad ibn Arslān, the kātib (secretary) of the Sultan Aḥmad Sanjar.

A Latin translation by Georg Freytag, entitled Arabum Proverbia, was published at Bonn in 1838–1843.