Haddad
Appearance
Origin | |
---|---|
Meaning | Locksmith, Blacksmith |
Region of origin | Levant |
Other names | |
Variant form(s) | Hadodo, Hadad |
Haddad (Arabic: حداد) is an Arabic surname meaning blacksmith, commonly used in the Levant and Algeria.[1]
Hadad is the name of an ancient Semitic storm-god.[2]
Persons with surname
[edit]Haddad
[edit]- Aaron Haddad (born 1982), American professional wrestler best known as Damien Sandow
- Abd al-Masih Haddad (1890–1963), writer of the Mahjar movement and journalist
- Amir Haddad (born 1984), Israeli French singer
- Amir-John Haddad (born 1975), German-Spanish flamenco guitarist and multi-instrumentalist
- Antoine Haddad (born 1954), Lebanese politician
- Andreas Haddad (born 1982), Assyrian Swedish footballer
- Beatriz Haddad Maia (born 1996), Brazilian tennis player
- Benjamin Haddad (born 1985), French politician
- Brendha Haddad (born 1986), Brazilian actress
- Caroline Haddad, Canadian competitive pair skater
- Dany Haddad (born 1960), Lebanese fencer
- Diana Haddad (born 1976), Lebanese singer
- Drew Haddad (born 1978), American football player
- Eddie Haddad (1928–1978), Canadian boxer
- Nouhad Wadie Haddad (born 1934 or 1935), known as Fairuz, Lebanese singer
- Fawwaz Haddad (born 1947), Syrian novelist
- Fernando Haddad (born 1963), Brazilian academic and politician
- Fouad Haddad (1927–1985), Egyptian poet
- François Haddad (born 1958) former judge at the Criminal Court, Geneva, Switzerland
- George Ibrahim Haddad, Jordanian writer, poet, and journalist
- Hubert Haddad (born 1947), Tunisian poet, playwright, and writer
- Humberto Hernandez-Haddad (born 1951), Mexican lawyer, Senator, and Federal Congressman
- Ibrahim Haddad (born 1938), Syrian politician and minister
- Ilias Haddad (born 1989), Dutch-Moroccan footballer
- Isaac Haddad (died 1755), Tunisian Talmudic scholar
- Jamey Haddad (born 1952), American jazz percussionist
- Jerrier A. Haddad (1922–2017), computer engineer
- John G. Haddad Jr, American endocrinologist after whom the IBMS John G. Haddad Jr. Award was named
- Joumana Haddad (born 1970), Lebanese poet, translator, journalist, and women's rights activist
- Karim Haddad (born 1962), Lebanese composer
- Kasia Haddad (born 1979), British actress
- Lahcen Haddad (born 1960), Moroccan politician
- Lawrence Haddad (born 1959), British economist
- Line Haddad (born 1978), French-Israeli pair skater
- Maria Ziadie-Haddad (born 1955), Jamaican airline pilot
- Malek Haddad (1927–1978), Algerian poet and writer
- Michel Haddad (born 1902), Egyptian boxer
- Mohammed Haddad (born 1975), Bahraini composer and music critic
- Musue Noha Haddad, Liberian journalist and photojournalist
- Nabil Haddad, Jordanian Arab priest of the Melkite Greek Catholic Church
- Óscar Bitar Haddad (born 1942), Mexican politician
- Paul Haddad (1963–2020), English-born Canadian actor
- Qassim Haddad (born 1948), Bahraini poet
- Radley Haddad (born 1990), American baseball coach
- Rudy Haddad (born 1985), French-Israeli football player
- Saad Haddad (1936–1984), Lebanese militant
- Sami Haddad (born 1950), Lebanese businessman, politician, and government minister
- Sami Ibrahim Haddad (1890–1957), Lebanese physician and writer
- Shai Haddad (born 1987), Israeli footballer
- Sonya Haddad (1936–2004), American translator and surtitler
- Soraya Haddad (born 1984), Algerian judoka
- Tahar Haddad (1899–1935), Tunisian author, scholar, and reformer
- Vico Haddad (born 1960), Israeli footballer and sports manager
- Wadie Haddad (1927–1978), Palestinian former head of the armed wing of the PFLP
- Wassim Michael Haddad (born 1961), Lebanese-Greek-American mathematician, scientist, and engineer
- William J. Haddad (1915–2010), Canadian lawyer and jurist
- Yoseph Haddad (born 1985), Israeli Arab activist
- Yvonne Haddad, Syrian professor
Hadad
[edit]- Amir Hadad (born 1978), Israeli tennis player
- Astrid Hadad (born 1957), Lebanese-Mexican actress
- Aviv Hadad (born 1984), Israeli footballer
- Daniel Hadad (born 1961), Argentine telecommunication businessman
- Haneh Hadad (1919–2020), Israeli Arab politician and Member of the Knesset
- Mauricio Hadad (born 1971), Colombian tennis player
- Sarit Hadad (born "Sarah Hodadetova" 1978), Israeli singer
Al Haddad
[edit]- Abdallah ibn Alawi al-Haddad (1634–1720), Yemeni Islamic scholar
- Abdulrahman Al-Haddad (born 1966), Emirati footballer
- Muayad Al-Haddad (born 1960), Kuwaiti footballer
- Saleh Al-Haddad (born 1986), Kuwaiti track and field athlete
El Haddad
[edit]- Andre El Haddad (born 1971), Lebanese football referee
- Laila el-Haddad, Palestinian freelance journalist, author, and media activist
- Mahmoud El-Haddad (born 1986), Egyptian weightlifter
- Saad El-Haddad, birth name of Baba Saad or just Saad, German rapper of Lebanese descent
- Essam El-Haddad (born 1953), Egyptian politician
Other
[edit]- Camilo Haddad station, a monorail station in São Paulo, Brazil
- Estádio Anísio Haddad, usually known as Rio Pretão, multi-purpose stadium in São José do Rio Preto, Brazil
See also
[edit]References
[edit]- ^ Casselman, Bill (2000). What's in a Canadian Name?: The Origins and Meanings of Canadian Names. McArthur & Company. p. 157. ISBN 978-1-55278-141-8.
- ^ Spencer L. Allen (5 March 2015). The Splintered Divine: A Study of Istar, Baal, and Yahweh Divine Names and Divine Multiplicity in the Ancient Near East. p. 10. ISBN 9781614512363.