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Nikola Nemešević (born November 18, 1988), who is better known by his stage name, Nemeš, is a Serbian Singer-songwriter.
Nemeš was born in Požarevac, Serbia to father Vojislav and mother Nada.
He became known to wider audience in Balkans as the contestant of Big Brother where he fell in love and started a relationship with one of the contestants, Marijana Čvrljak.
Nemeš started playing piano and keyboards with several bands while he was still in high school.
One of the bands he continued working with is a pop-rock band Bad Choice.
After graduating music high school in Požarevac, he enrolled in the University of Arts in Belgrade where he studied and graduated in Opera singing.
His singing professors were primadona Radmila Smiljanić and Nikola Mijailović (singer).
He took part in several international opera festivals, including Oper Oder-Spree in Beeskow, Germany and International Summer Music School Pučišća, Croatia.
Nemes is the striped headcloth worn by pharaohs in ancient Egypt.
Nemes may also refer to:
Nimis (Slovene: Neme) is a town and comune of 2,817 located in the Italian province of Udine, about near to the border with Slovenia. It is situated at the foot of Mount Bernadia, home to a World War I Italian fort and a sweet white wine, Ramandolo.
The town is bordered by the comuni of Attimis, Lusevera, Povoletto, Reana del Rojale, Taipana and Tarcento.
According to the 1971 census, 25.4% of the population are Slovenes, but these are located mainly on some villages on the surrounding hills and not in the main town and the rest of the plain. Due to the ethnic, linguistic and cultural features of their population, the mountainous parts of the municipality are considered part of the traditional region known as the Friulian Slavia. In the remaining part of the municipality, the Friulian language is still widely spoken.
Nimis was founded by the ancient Romans, its name deriving from the Latin word "Nemus". After the fall of the Western Roman Empire it housed a castrum, mentioned by Paul the Deacon in his Historia Langobardorum. In World War II, the town was burned by the SS, due to the presence of both Italian and Yugoslav partisan brigades in the area.