List of New Testament lectionaries (1001–1500)

A New Testament Lectionary is a handwritten copy of a lectionary, or book of New Testament Bible readings. Lectionaries may be written in majuscule or minuscule Greek letters, on parchment, papyrus, vellum, or paper.

Lectionaries which have the Gospels readings are called Evangeliaria or Evangelistaria, those which have the Acts or Epistles, Apostoli or Praxapostoli. They appear from the 6th century.

Gregory in 1909 enumerated 2234 lectionaries. To the present day 2484 lectionary manuscripts have been catalogued by the (INTF) in Münster.

Below is the list of lectionary 1001 to 1500. For other related lists, see:
 * List of New Testament lectionaries
 * List of New Testament lectionaries (1–500)
 * List of New Testament lectionaries (501–1000)
 * List of New Testament lectionaries (1501–2000)

Legend

 * The numbers (#) are the now standard system of Caspar René Gregory (Gregory–Aland).
 * Dates are estimated to the nearest century (except lectionaries dated by scribes which are shown in the Date column).
 * Content only the Gospel lessons (Evangelistarion), and other lessons from the rest of the NT apart from Revelation (Apostolos). Sometimes the surviving portion of a codex is so limited that specific books, chapters or even verses can be indicated. Linked articles, where they exist, generally specify content in detail, by verse.
 * Digital images are referenced with direct links to the hosting web pages. The quality and accessibility of the images is as follows:

Contents Legend: † Indicates the manuscript has damaged or missing pages.

P Indicates only a portion of the original book remains.

K Indicates manuscript also includes commentary notes.

sel Indicates contents include Scripture readings for selected days only.

e Indicates contents include weekday Scripture readings.

esk Indicates contents include weekday Scripture readings from Easter to Pentecost and Saturday/Sunday readings for other weeks.

sk Indicates contents include only Saturday and Sunday Scripture readings.

Lit Indicates Liturgical book containing an assortment of New Testament texts.

PsO Indicates a Psalter with Biblical Odes.

[ ] Brackets around Gregory-Aland number indicate the number is no longer is use.

Script Legend: ΑΩ indicates Majuscule script αω indicates Minuscule script PU indicates manuscript is a palimpsest and script is the text under the later script. PO indicates manuscript is a palimpsest and script is the text over the prior script.