Nikola Radonja (Serbian: Никола Радоња) or Nikola Radonja Branković or Gerasim or Roman, (c. 1330-1399) was a 14th-century Serbian nobleman and chronicler, a member of the Branković dynasty as the eldest son of Branko Mladenović.
In documents he was referred with one or two out of four different names he had during his life: Nikola, Radonja (Radohna), Roman and Gerasim.
Radonja was a member of the Branković dynasty as the eldest son of Branko Mladenović. Radonja's younger brothers were Vuk Branković and Grgur Branković. He was married to Jelena, a sister of Uglješa Mrnjavčević. Radonja had a title of caesar (Serbian: ћесар) and controlled an estate in Serres region where he and his wife Jelena lived with their two daughters.
Nikola (Cyrillic: Никола, Serbo-Croatian pronunciation: [nǐkola]) is a unisex given name, derived from Greek Nikolaos (Νικόλαος), common in Bosnia and Herzegovina, Bulgaria, Croatia, Macedonia, Montenegro, Serbia, the Czech Republic, Slovakia and Slovenia. Besides the name "Nikola", in Macedonia there is a name "Nikolče" (Николче), which is a diminutive of the name "Nikola". In Poland, it is used as a female name, as is done with Nicola in the UK and Germany.
Nikola is a German television sitcom that premiered on September 12, 1997 on RTL Television.
After her divorce Nicola Vollendorf moves to Cologne together with her children Peter and Stephanie. She gets a job as nurse in the Rheintalklinik hospital. There she has arguments with the Chief Physician Dr. Schmidt. The battle expands to her home, because they are living in the same building. In later seasons, they start a romantic relationship. They marry in the last episode.