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Trianon

Trianon may refer to:

  • Le Grand Trianon, a palace near Versailles, France
  • Le Petit Trianon, a château near Versailles, France
  • Le Trianon (theatre), a theatre and concert hall at 80, boulevard de Rochechouart in Paris
  • Treaty of Trianon, 1920 post-World War I treaty between Allies and Hungary, defining its borders
  • Trianon (Frankfurt am Main), a skyscraper in Germany
  • Hotel Trianon, fictional hotel in Graham Greene's 1966 novel The Comedians
  • The Trianon, formerly "Claremont", 1907 mansion now the main building of The Colorado Springs School
  • "Trianon", the codename of the CIA spy in the 1984 Soviet film TASS Is Authorized to Declare...
  • Trianon Ballrooms, ballrooms during America's big band era
  • Trianon, a trade name of sulfapyridine
Trianon (Frankfurt am Main)

Trianon is a 45- storey, 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 (sorority)

Trianon sorority was a national collegiate organization operating in the United States from December 1929 until 1977.

Usage examples of "trianon".

It had been settled that the king and queen should go by themselves to La Muette, and that the rest of the royal family should remove to the Trianon.

I heard that the king had been bled, that the wound was not mortal, and finally, that the wound was trifling, and that his majesty could go to the Trianon if he liked.

They stood in the porchway of the Trianon hotel, sheltering from the monsoon-like rain behind the side glass panels.

One was that the boches occupying Versailles were looting the community, enslaving all the males and raping all the females—including the nuns of the parishes of Notre-Dame and St-Louis—and were carrying off to Berlin all the art treasures of the château and the Trianons.

And some of the good news was almost as depressing—for example, the revelation that the boches occupying Versailles were not looting the château and the Trianons, and not raping nuns or anybody else.

Mr and Mrs Crooke and their son Stephen, who lived near the park in 1907 and 1908, said they saw several figures, including a 'sketching lady' like the one Miss Moberly had seen outside the Trianon, and a man in a three-cornered hat.