Jamal al-Din al-Mizzi

In childhood he moved with his family to the village of al-Mizza outside Damascus, where he was educated in Qur'ān and fiqh.

His fellow pupil and life-long friend was Taqī al-Dīn ibn Taymiyya.

It was also Taymiyya's ideological influence, which although contrary to his own Shāfi'ī legalist inclination, that led to a stint in jail.

Despite his affiliation with Ibn Taymiyya he became head of the Dār al-Ḥadīth al-Ashrafiyya, a leading ḥadīth academy in Damascus, in 1319.

[3] He travelled across the Mamluk Sultanate of Egypt, Syria (الشَّام), and Ḥijāz and became the greatest `Ilm al-rijāl (عِلْمُ الرِّجال) scholar of the Muslim world and an expert grammarian and philologist of Arabic.