Abu al-Qasim al-Tabarani: One of the trustworthy and most esteemed Muslims
Abu Sa'id ibn Yunus al-Misri: I wrote from him a little, his narrations are sound, and he had good beliefs
Abu Abd Allah al-Asadi: He considers narrating from him a weakness for the narrator
Abu Ali al-Hafiz al-Naysaburi: He was a pillar of Hadith
Ibn Asakir al-Dimashqi: The Sheikh of Damascus in his time
Al-Daraqutni: He had unique narrations, but he was not strong
Al-Dhahabi: Trustworthy, but with some unusual narrations
Hamza ibn Muhammad al-Kinani: He abandoned narrating from him
Da'laj ibn Ahmad al-Sijistani: I entered Damascus and he wrote for me a section from Ibn Jawsa, but I do not narrate from him, for I saw in his house a Chinese puppy, and I said he narrated from the Prophet that he forbade keeping dogs, and this one keeps a dog
Muslimah ibn al-Qasim al-Andalusi: He was a scholar of Hadith, famous for narration, knowledgeable in classification, and the journey to him was common in his time. Something happened between him and his scribe, so he took another scribe. The first one entered narrations in his narration that were not his, and he narrated them, so people criticized him. Then he stopped and retracted from them.