Sima Lukin Lazic (Serbian Cyrillic: ???? ????? ?????; 15 August 1863 – 19 July 1904) was an Austro-Hungarian Serb publisher, journalist, historian and writer.
Born in Bosanski Brod, Bosnia Vilayet, into a merchant family, his father was involved in anti-Ottoman affairs forcing him to flee to the Principality of Serbia.
Lazic was brought up in Šabac, where he finished primary school, then finished three years of gymnasium in Belgrade in 1876.
He signed up as a volunteer in the Serbian–Ottoman War (1876–78) but was rejected due to illness.
Not finishing gymnasium, he worked as an actor in circuses.
From 1886 to 1889 he acted at the Serbian National Theatre in Novi Sad (Kingdom of Hungary).
He lived in Belgrade (Kingdom of Serbia) and Zagreb (Kingdom of Croatia-Slavonia), where he published texts of all kinds.
He was the editor of Srbobran and Vrac pogodac.
He was a supporter of the People's Radical Party.
He was married to Zorka Miletic, the paternal niece of Svetozar Miletic.