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"František Čermák and Leoš Friedl were the defending champions, but lost in the semifinals to eventual champions Jiří Novák and Andrei Pavel. Novak and Pavel won the title, defeating Marco Chiudinelli and Jean-Claude Scherrer in the final, 6–3, 6–1. Seeds Draw =Draw= External links * Draw Category:Swiss Open (tennis) Category:2006 ATP Tour "
"Abdulaziz bin Majid Al Saud is the former governor of Madinah Province and a member of House of Saud. Early life and education Prince Abdulaziz's father is Majid bin Abdulaziz.and a full-brother of Prince Sattam. Abdulaziz's mother is Nuf bint Abdallah Al Fahd Al Muhanna. Abdulaziz bin Majid is the full brother of Prince Mishaal and he also has five sisters. One of his sisters, Jawaher bint Majid, is the first Saudi woman to have been granted the title of the patron of arts in Saudi Arabia. Prince Abdulaziz is a graduate of King Fahd University of Petroleum and Minerals. Career Abdulaziz bin Majid is former deputy governor of Al-Qassim Province where the governor was Faisal bin Bandar. His tenure lasted until October 2005. When then-governor of Madinah Province Muqrin bin Abdulaziz was appointed as head of the General Intelligence Presidency, Abdulaziz bin Majid was appointed governor of the province in October 2005. His term was extended for four years in 2009. Prince Abdulaziz's term ended on 14 January 2013 and he was replaced by Prince Faisal bin Salman. Other positions Abdulaziz bin Majid is vice chairman of the Majid Society that was founded by his father in 1998 for charitable purposes. Personal life Abdulaziz bin Majid is married to Princess Nuha, the daughter of the former governor of Ha'il, Prince Saud bin Abdul Muhsin Al Saud. He has three sons and one daughter: Saud, Omar, Abdullah and Lolowah. References External links Abdulaziz Abdulaziz Category:King Fahd University of Petroleum and Minerals alumni Category:Living people Category:Year of birth missing (living people) "
"The Sanni () are mentioned by Strabo (1st century BC/1st century AD), Pliny the Elder (1st century AD) and Arrian (2nd century AD) as a people settling near Trebizond (in today's Turkish Black Sea Region). In the 1st and 2nd centuries AD, their territory extended to the north-east until the river Ophis, and covered both the littoral and the mountainous hinterland. Pliny grouped together the Sanni who lived in the region of Trebizond and the Heniochi as one single nation. He also mentions other Sanni, living further on the Colchis littoral, past the mouth of the Rioni. According to Theodoret of Cyrrus (5th century AD), the Sanni and Lazi were two different tribes. In the first centuries AD, Sanni people living in the region of Trebizond were paying tribute to the Roman Empire. However, they tried to avoid heavy direct taxation and later left the coastal areas for the mountains. In the 6th century, Procopius still mentions them as living near the source of the Boasi (today the Chorokhi, or Çoruh River). There have been various interpretations of the ethnonym in Georgian literature; some scholars, such as Simon Kaukhchishvili, suggest that it is related to the name "chan" or its variants, long present in Greek mythological narratives about Colchis; others, among them Arnold Chikobava, see it as derived from the name still given to Mingrelian people in the Svan language Zan (see also Zan language). In the opinion of S. Dzhanashia, San was indeed an endonym of ancient Colchians, which later evolved into the forms Zan in the north of Colchis (Mingrelia) and Chan in the southern part (which would become Lazistan). The form Τζάνοι (Chani) can be found in Byzantine authors such as Procopius, but Sanni can be found as recently as the 12th century. Today, Chani is still used as an ethnonym for the Laz people. References *გეორგიკა. ბიზანტიელი მწერლების ცნობები საქართველოს შესახებ, ს. ყაუხჩიშვილის გამოც., ტ. 3, თბ., 1965 *მიქელაძე თ., ძიებანი კოლხეთისა და სამხრეთ-აღმოსავლეთი შავიზღვისპირეთის უძველესი მოსახლეობის ისტორიიდან (ძვ. წ. II-I ატასწლეულები), თბ., 1974; *ჯანაშია ს., თუბალ-თაბალი, ტიბარენი, იბერი, შრომები, ტ. 3, თბ., 1959. Category:Ethnographic groups of people from Georgia (country) Category:Ancient peoples of Georgia (country) Category:Tribes in Greco-Roman historiography "