Haddad or Hadad (Aramaic: ܚܕܕ, Hebrew: חדד) is an ancient Middle Eastern family name. Hadad was also a Semitic storm-god.
The original Haddad (Aramaic: ܚܕܕ or ܚܕܐܕ) name means Blacksmith in ancient Semitic languages. The Haddad name dates back to the ancient era of the Middle East. Haddad is the most commonly used surname in the Canaan region of the Middle East. People with the last name Haddad traditionally originate from Lebanon, Syria, Jordan, Palestine, Israel, Yemen, Iran and Iraq. In the Aramaic-Turoyo dialect, the Haddads are also known as "Hadodo ܚܕܕܐ". People with the surname Hadodo, are usually Assyrians from Tur Abdin. Although ancestry of the last name varies due to migration, there exists a variety of origins, and not all of the name carriers share the same blood line.
The Haddad (also known as the Danoa) are a Sahelian Muslim ethnic group found through Nigeria, Chad and Sudan, numbering more than 250,000 individuals. They live in the midst of other peoples and do not have their own language but speak the language of the surrounding community. The traditional employment of the community has always been blacksmithry.
They are universally despised by all other ethnic groups, and live segregated, generally without any land or water rights. They are strictly endogamous and are often considered untouchable by the members of other groups. These sentiments are reciprocated by the Haddad, who maintain a high view of their group. Recently, Haddad members, because of the decline of their monopoly of blacksmithry caused by importation, have started migrating to the Sudanese towns, living beside other ethnic groups.
Trianon may refer to:
Trianon is a 45-storey, 186 m (610 ft) skyscraper in the Westend-Süd district of Frankfurt, Germany completed in 1993. It serves as the company headquarters for DekaBank, other tenants are Linklaters and Franklin Templeton. Atop the building is an upside-down pyramid suspended from the three corners.
The building was sold by DekaBank to Morgan Stanley in 2007, the building was acquired by the Morgan Stanley European Office Fund (MSEOF). A 57 percent interest was later passed on to the real estate investment fund Morgan Stanley P2 value.
Trianon as seen from Main Tower
Trianon as seen from Main Tower
View from the base
View from the base
Trianon sorority was a national collegiate organization operating in the United States from December 1929 until 1977.
Trianon was formed from the mergers of three college clubs in Ohio and Indiana. First, at the University of Cincinnati, in 1925, Dean Josephine P. Simrall assisted female student in creating the Campus Club. Next, in November 1926, several women formed a similar club on their campus, Butler University. In the spring of 1929, thirty-seven female students at Miami University formed the Miami Girl's Club (Trianon Key).
Members of the three clubs convened on December 28 and 29, 1929, to form Trianon sorority. This event came to be known as the first National Convention of Trianon (Trianon Key).
Per "The 1942 Drift" yearbook of Butler University, Indianapolis, Indiana, "Trianon, the national non-Greek sorority, was established on the Butler Campus in December 28, 1929. Butler was one of three mother units of Trianon." Adviser for this 1942 sorority was Mrs. Gino Ratti; Miss Martha Kincaid was Faculty Sponsor.