This blog post will show an accumulation of texts written that concern Saint Vitus in some capacity. They come chiefly from databases I have access to (JSTOR, ATLA, ITER). Chicago style, as best as WordPress allows. Pity I could not figure out the indentations.
Bibliography
Bravermanová, Milena. “Archaeological Textiles from Prague Castle, Czech Republic.” In North European Symposium for Archaeological Textiles X, edited by Strand Eva Andersson, Gleba Margarita, Mannering Ulla, Munkholt Cherine, and Ringgaard Maj, 31-35. Oxford; Oakville: Oxbow Books, 2010.
— — — . “The Collection of Archaeological Textiles at Prague Castle.” In Northern Archaeological Textiles, edited by Pritchard Frances and Wild John Peter, 93-97. Oxford: Oxbow Books, 2005.
Cílek, Václav, Evan W. Mellander, Morna Livingston, and Laurie Olin. “The Breath of Bones and Places.” In To Breathe with Birds: A Book of Landscapes, 83-98. Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press, 2015.
Dickason, Kathryn Emily. “Decadance in the Late Middle Ages: The Case of Choreomania.” In Medieval Theatre Performance: Actors, Dancers, Automata and Their Audiences, edited by Butterworth Philip and Normington Katie, 141-60. Woodbridge, Suffolk, UK; Rochester, NY, USA: Boydell and Brewer, 2017.
Kalina, Pavel. “Architecture and Memory. St. Vitus’s Cathedral in Prague and the Problem of the Presence of History.” In Art as An Instrument of Rule: Bohemia and the Holy Roman Empire Among the Luxembourgers In a European Context, edited by Jiri Fajt and Andrea Langer, 150-56. Berlin: German Art Publisher, 2009.
Kottje, Raymund. “Library as a Mirror into History: On the Inner History of Gladbach’s St. Vitus Abbey in the 12th Century.” Treatises – Bavarian Academy of Sciences. Philosophical-Historical Class, New series, vol. 99, (1988). 241-48.
Maskarinec, Maya. City of Saints: Rebuilding Rome in the Early Middle Ages. Philadelphia, PA: University of Pennsylvania Press, 2018.
Miladinov, Marina. “PREFACE.” In Saints of the Christianization Age of Central Europe: Tenth to Eleventh Centuries, edited by Klaniczay Gábor, by Gaşpar Cristian and Wood Ian, 19-26. Budapest, Hungary: Central European University Press, 2013.
Milorad, Ekmečić. “The Emergence of St. Vitus Day as the Principle National Holiday of the Serbs.” In Kosovo: Legacy of a Medieval Battle, edited by Wayne Vucinich and Thomas Emmert, 331-42. Minneapolis, MN: University of Minnesota Press, 1991.
Piqué, Francesca and Dusan Stulik, ed. Conservation of the Last Judgement Mosaic, St. Vitus Cathedral, Prague. Los Angeles, CA: Getty Conservation Institute, 2004.
Rice, Louise. “Two Scenes from the Life of St. Wenceslas by Giovanni Battista Gaulli.” Master Drawings 44, no. 2 (2006): 221-28.
Šedinová, Hana. “The Symbolism of the Precious Stones in St. Wenceslas Chapel.” Artibus Et Historiae 20, no. 39 (1999): 75-94.
Strasser, Gerhard F. “Saint Vitus, the Vitus Dance and Those Bitten by the Tarantula.” In Rulers: Heroes, Saints: Medieval Myths, Vol. 1, edited by Ulrich Müller and Werner Whimsical, 557-65. St. Gallen, Switzerland: UVK, Specialist Publisher for Science and Studies, 1996.
Suckale, Robert. “Bohemian Master, c. 1390/1400. Master of the St. Vitus Madonna.” In Masterpieces of Western Art: A History of Art In 900 Individual Studies, Vol. 1, by Ingo F. Walther, 71. Taschen, Cologne: Taschen Publisher, 1996.
Whitfill, Patrick. “The Dancing Plague.” The Threepenny Review 145 (2016): 5.