Jamal al-Din al-Mizzi
Template:Short description Script error: No such module "Infobox".Template:Template otherTemplate:Wikidata imageScript error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters".Template:Compare Jamāl al-Dīn Abū al-Ḥajjāj Yūsuf ibn al-Zakī ʻAbd al-Raḥmān ibn Yūsuf ibn ʻAbd al-Malik ibn Yūsuf al-Kalbī al-Quḍā'ī al-Mizzī, (Template:Langx), also called Al-Ḥāfiẓ Abī al-Ḥajjāj, was a Syrian muhaddith and the foremost `Ilm al-rijāl Islamic scholar.
Life
Al-Mizzī was born near Aleppo in 1256 under the reign of the last Ayyubid emir An-Nasir Yusuf. From 1260 the region was ruled by the na'ib al-saltana (viceroys) of the Mamluk Sultanate. In childhood he moved with his family to the village of al-Mizza outside Damascus, where he was educated in Qur'ān and fiqh. Template:Sfn In his twenties he began his studies to become a muḥaddith and learned from the masters. 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. And although he professed the Ash'arī doctrine suspicion continued about his true beliefs.Template:Sfn He travelled across the Mamluk Sultanate of Egypt, Syria (Script error: No such module "Lang".), and Ḥijāz and became the greatest `Ilm al-rijāl (Script error: No such module "Lang".) scholar of the Muslim world and an expert grammarian and philologist of Arabic.Template:Sfn He died at Dar al-Hadith al-Ashrafiyyah in Damascus in 1341/2 and was buried in the Sufiyyah graveyard.[1]
PupilsTemplate:Sfn
- Al-Dhahabī
- 'Abd al-Wahhab al-Subkī
- Ismā'īl ibn Kathīr Template:Snd Ibn Kathir married a daughter of al-Mizzī.[2]
- Ibn al-Furat[3]
- Najm ad-Din al-Tufi
Works
- Tahdhīb al-kamāl fī asmā' al-rijāl; biographical lexicon and comprehensive reworking of Al-Kamal fi Asma' al-Rijal, a collection of narrator biographies[1] of the transmitters of isnāds in the Six major Hadith collections and others, based upon the tarf (beginning segment) of the hadith.[1] The Tahdhīb includes Ruwāt kuttub al-sitta. Al-Asqalānī and others wrote compendia of this work.Template:Sfn
- Tuḥfat al-ashraf bi-Ma'rifat al-Aṭraf; alphabetically indexed encyclopaedia of the musnads of the first generation transmitters, the Companions of the Prophet. An indispensable resource for the study of Muslim tradition that comprises al-Nasā'ī's Al-Sunan al-kubrā.Template:Sfn
References
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- ↑ a b c Template:Ws, by al-Kattani, pg. 208, Dar al-Basha'ir al-Islamiyyah, Beirut, seventh edition, 2007.
- ↑ Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
- ↑ Fozia Bora, Writing History in the Medieval Islamic World: The Value of Chronicles as Archives, The Early and Medieval Islamic World (London: I.B. Tauris, 2019), p. 38; Template:ISBN.
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Bibliography
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External links
- Pages with script errors
- 1256 births
- 1342 deaths
- 13th-century Arab people
- 14th-century Arab people
- Sunni Muslim scholars of Islam
- Shafi'is
- Atharis
- Hadith scholars
- People from Damascus
- 14th-century Muslim scholars of Islam
- Proto-Salafists
- 13th-century jurists
- 14th-century jurists
- Biographical evaluation scholars
- Banu Kalb