The Gospel of Saint Nicholas (Serbo-Croatian: Nikoljsko jevanđelje, Никољско јеванђеље) is an illuminated manuscript from the late 14th or early 15th century from the Kingdom of Bosnia.
Đuro Daničić published the book Nikoljsko jevanđelje in the state printing house in Belgrade in 1864, which he dedicated to the Serbian prince Mihailo Obrenović.
During the evacuation in July 1914, from the collection of rarities of the National Library, 56 most precious and valuable manuscripts and printed books, including the Gospel of St. Nicholas were singled out, placed in wooden boxes and sent by a train to Kosovska Mitrovica far from the front lines.
It took until 1964 for it to become known that a part of the lost Serbian cultural heritage treasure, including the St. Nicholas Gospel, was kept in the library of the private collector Sir Chester Beatty in Dublin.
After reviewing the recordings of the texts sent to him by Barnicot, Mošin concluded that the manuscripts in question, which were kept in the National Library of Serbia until the First World War, disappeared a long time ago.