Article

An English-Language Bibliography on Bavarian History

Introduction

In the course of my work at the Institute of Bavarian History at the University of Munich, I have developed the following bibliography, which is intended as a working aid for international scholars and students. It covers the range of English-language publications on Bavarian history but does not claim to be complete. Suggestions to supplement and complete the bibliography are welcome and can be submitted via the feedback form at the end of this text.

The bibliography adheres to the following guidelines:

  • The bibliography systematically considers academic publications from 1968 to 2018 in addition to especially significant publications outside of this period.
  • Studies on all areas and regions within the present Free State of Bavaria are recorded, regardless of their territorial affiliation in the period under consideration. Therefore, the regions Upper and Lower Bavaria, Franconia, Upper Palatinate, and Bavarian Swabia are included, whereas the former Rhenish Palatinate is not.
  • The publications included focus specifically on Bavarian history; studies which only briefly or incidentally deal with historical events in Bavaria are not included.
  • The list does not include research on events that took place in Bavaria but are not inherently linked to Bavarian history (e.g., Nuremberg Trials, Munich Agreement, etc.).
  • Titles of publications which do not clearly indicate how the study is related to Bavarian history are expanded to include the corresponding information in square brackets.
  • Doctoral dissertations on Bavarian history are marked with the abbreviation “PhD.”
  • In order to ensure better clarity, titles are classified by epoch, except in the case of the categories “Theory and Methodology” and “Source Editions.”

Some general remarks: Most of the works listed were originally written in English; little German-language research in these fields is currently available in English translation. The large number of studies on the early modern era is also particularly striking. The publications identified deal mainly with the following fields of research:

  • Political history of Bavaria and the territories that have merged into Bavaria
  • History of religion and church history: monasteries, Reformation and confessionalization, Jewish history
  • Economic history: guilds, trading houses and trade relations, history of large enterprises
  • History of the free imperial cities, in particular: Augsburg, Nuremberg, Regensburg
  • Cultural and art history (e.g., Dürer, Munich around 1900)
  • International networks (e.g., relations with other countries)
  • History of education and schools (especially in the nineteenth century)
  • Military and war history
  • Superstitions and witch-hunts
  • Denazification after World War II

Content

Theory and Methodology of Regional History

  • Aston, Michael, Interpreting the Landscape. Landscape archaeology and local history, London 2006.
  • Atkins, Peter – Simmons, Ian G. – Roberts, Brian (eds.), People, Land and Time. An historical introduction to the relations between landscape, culture and environment, London etc. 1998.
  • Atkinson, David, Cultural Geography. A critical dictionary of key concepts, London etc. 2005.
  • Balée, William L. (ed.), Advances in Historical Ecology, New York 1998.
  • Börzel, Tanja Anita – Risse, Thomas (eds.), The Oxford Handbook of Comparative Regionalism, Oxford 2016.
  • Calcatinge, Alexandru, The need for a Cultural Landscape Theory. An architect’s approach, Wien etc. 2012.
  • Classen, Albrecht (ed.), Rural space in the middle ages and early modern age. The Spatial Turn in Premodern Studies, Berlin etc. 2012.
  • Crang, Mike, Thinking Space, London etc. 2000.
  • Crumley, Carole L. (ed.), Historical Ecology. Cultural knowledge and changing landscapes, Santa Fe 1994.
  • Crumley, Carole L. – Lennartsson, Tommy – Westin, Anna (eds.), Issues and Concepts in Historical Ecology: The past and future of landscapes and regions, Cambridge / New York 2017.
  • Doyle, Barry M., Introduction, in: Ibid. (ed.), Urban Politics and Space in the Nineteenth and Twentieth Centuries. Regional Perspectives, Newcastle 2007, 1-29.
  • Flint, Colin, The Theoretical and Methodological Utility of Space and Spatial Statistics for Historical Studies. The Nazi Party in Geographic Context, in: Historical Methods 35 (2002), 32-42.
  • Gamper, Anna, Regions and Regionalism(s): An Introduction, in: Grabher, Gudrun M. – Mathis-Moser, Ursula (eds.), Regionalism(s). A Variety of Perspectives from Europe and the Americas, Wien 2014, 3-24.
  • Hönninghausen, Lothar (ed.), Regionalism in the Age of Globalism, 2 Volumes, Madison/WI 2005.
  • Hroch, Miroslav, Regional Memory. Reflections on the Role of History in (Re)Constructing Regional Identity, in: Ellis, Steven G. (ed.), Frontiers, Regions and Identities in Europe, Pisa 2009, 1-14.
  • Hroch, Miroslav, National history in opposition to regional history? In: Eberhard, Winfried – Lübke, Christian (eds.), The Plurality of Europe. Identities and Spaces, Leipzig 2010, 83-96.
  • Jacobson, Stephen et al., What is a Region? Regions in European History, in: Ellis, Steven G. et al. (ed.), Regional and Transnational History in Europe (Creating a new historical perspective: EU and the wider world / Clioworld readers 8), Pisa 2011, 11-66.
  • Ickerodt, Ulf, The Term “Cultural Landscape”, in: Meier, Thomas (ed.), Landscape Ideologies (Archaeolingua / Series minor 22), Budapest 2006, 53-80.
  • Keating, Michael, Regionalism in the Alps: Subnational, Supranational, and Transnational, in: Caramani, Daniele (ed.), Challenges to consensual politics: Democracy, identity, and populist protest in the Alpine region (Regionalism and Federalism 6), Bruxelles etc. 2005, 53-70.
  • Knoll, Martin – Boscani Leoni, Simona (eds.), An Environmental History of the Early Modern Period: Experiments and Perspectives, Wien etc. 2014.
  • Koch, Andreas, Identity and Space. Construction and Interdependency of Local Neighborhood, in: Coelsch-Foisner, Sabine (ed.), Raum in Wandel: L’espace en metamorphose: Space in change (Wissenschaft und Kunst 14), Heidelberg 2011, 33-41.
  • Kolen, Jan etc. (eds.), Landscape Biographies. Geographical, historical and archaeological perspectives on the production and transmission of landscapes, Amsterdam 2015.
  • Lancaster, Bill et al. (ed.), An Agenda for Regional History, Newcastle 2007.
  • Lehmkuhl, Ursula (ed.), Historians and Nature. Comparative approaches to environmental history, Oxford etc. 2007.
  • Loughlin, John – Kincaid, John – Swenden, Wilfried (eds.), Routledge Handbook of Regionalism & Federalism, London / New York 2013.
  • Muir, Richard, The New Reading the Landscape. Fieldwork in Landscape History, Exeter 2000.
  • Muir, Richard, Landscape Encyclopaedia. A reference guide to the historic landscape, Bollington 2004.
  • Muir, Richard, How the Read a Village, London 2007.
  • Nieuwenhuis, Marijn – Crouch, David (eds.), The Question of Space. Interrogating the spatial turn between disciplines, London 2017.
  • Nuñez Seixas, Xosé-Manuel, Historiographical Approaches to Sub-National Identities in Europe: A Reappraisal and Some Suggestions, in: Augusteijn, Jost – Storm, Erich (eds.), Region and State in Nineteenth-Century Europe. Nation-building, regional identities and separatism, Basingstoke 2012, 13-35.
  • Nuñez Seixas, Xosé-Manuel – Storm, Eric (eds.), Regionalism and Modern Europe. Identity Construction and Movements from 1890 to the Present Day, London etc. 2019.
  • O´Keeffe, Tadhg, Landscape and Memory: Historiography, Theory, Methodology, in: Moore, Niam et al. (eds.), Heritage, Memory and the Politics of Identity. New Perspectives on the Cultural Landscape, Aldershot etc. 2007, 3-18.
  • Rippon, Stephen, Making Sense of an Historic Landscape, Oxford 2012.
  • Söderbaum, Fredrik, Rethinking Regionalism, Basingstoke 2016.
  • Sonkoly, Gabor, Historical Urban Landscape, New York 2017.
  • Thomas, Alexander W., Critical Rural Theory. Structure, Space, Culture, Lanham etc. 2011.
  • Umbach, Maiken (ed.), Municipalism, Regionalism, Nationalism: Hybrid Identity Formations and the Making of Modern Europe, in: European Review of History 15 (2008) – Special Issue, 235-330.
  • Warf, Barney et al. (ed.), The Spatial Turn. Interdisciplinary perspectives, London etc. 2009.

Source Editions

  • Anderson, Roberta – Bellenger, Dominic Aidan (ed.), Medieval Religion. A Sourcebook, London etc. 2007.
  • Baynes, Norman Hepburn (ed.), Speeches of Adolf Hitler. Representative Passages from the Early Speeches, 1922-1924, New York 2006.
  • Brown, John C. – Guinnane, Timothy W., The Munich Polizeimeldebogen as a source for quantitative history, in: Historical Methods 26 (1993), 101-118.
  • Cohen, Adam S. (ed.), The Uta Codex. Art, Philosophy, and Reform in eleventh-century Germany, University Park 2000.
  • Crew, David F., Hitler and the Nazis. A History in Documents, Oxford 2005.
  • Dannemann, Gerhard – Böttcher, Lorenz (eds.), German Law Archive (University of Oxford) [URL: <https://germanlawarchive.iuscomp.org/>]
  • Flemming, Barbara, The diary of Karl Süssheim 1878–1947. Orientalist between Munich and Istanbul (Verzeichnis der orientalischen Handschriften in Deutschland, Supplementband 32), Stuttgart 2002.
  • German Historical Institute, Washington D.C. (ed.), German History in Documents and Images [URL: <http://germanhistorydocs.ghi-dc.org/Index.cfm?language=English>]
  • Godman, Peter, Rethinking the Carmina Burana (I): The Medieval Context and Modern Reception of the Codex Buranus, in: Journal of Medieval & Early Modern Studies 45 (2015), 245-286.
  • Halsall, Paul (ed.), Internet Medieval Sourcebook (Fordham University Center for Medieval Studies) [URL: <https://sourcebooks.fordham.edu/sbook.asp>]
  • Halsall, Paul (ed.), Internet Modern History Sourcebook (Fordham University) [URL: <</a href =”https://sourcebooks.fordham.edu/mod/modsbook.asp”>https://sourcebooks.fordham.edu/mod/modsbook.asp>]
  • Kidder, Annemarie S. (ed.), Ultimate Price. Testimonies of Christians who resisted the Third Reich, Maryknoll 2012. [Alfred Delp, Sophie Scholl, Rupert Mayer]
  • Klemperer, Victor, Munich 1919. Diary of a Revolution, Cambridge / Malden 2017.
  • Kuhn, Gabriel, All Power to the Councils! A documentary history of the German Revolution of 1918-1919, Oakland/CA 2012. [Landauer, Mühsam]
  • Liess, Albrecht, History of reorganisation and rearrangement of the holdings of the State Archives in Bavaria, in: Archivalische Zeitschrit 84 (2001), 123-154.
  • Lindberg, Carter (ed.), The European Reformations Sourcebook, Chichester 22014.
  • Loud, Graham A. – Schenk, Jochen (eds.), The Origins of the German Principalities, 1100-1350. Essays by German Historians, London – New York 2017. [Privilegium Minus 1156, Gelnhausen Charter 1180 (Deposition of Henry the Lion), Confoederatio cum Principibus Ecclesiasticis 1220, Statutum in Favorem Principum 1230, Mainz Land Peace 1235]
  • Malzahn, Manfred, Germany 1945-1949. A Sourcebook, London etc. 1991.
  • Marshall, Tariq (ed.), The Carmina Burana: Songs from Benediktbeuren: a full and faithfull translation with critical annotations, [s.l.] 2011.
  • Medick, Hans – Marschke, Benjamin (ed.), Experiencing the Thirty Years War. A Brief History with Documents, Boston / New York 2013.
  • Noble Society. Five lives from twelfth-century Germany. Selected sources translated and annotated by Jonathan R. Lyon (Manchester Medieval Sources Series), Manchester 2017 [Mechthild von Dießen; Otto von Bamberg]
  • Otto Frisingensis, The Two Cities: A chronicle of universal history to the year 1146 A.D., translated by Charles Christopher Mierow, edited by Austin P. Evans, New York 2002.
  • Rabinbach, Anson – Gilman, Sander L. (eds.), The Third Reich Sourcebook, Berkeley / Los Angeles 2013.
  • Rivers, Theodore John (ed.), Laws of the Alamans and Bavarians (Leges Alamannorum – Lex Baiuvariorum), Philadelphia 1977.
  • Rosemann, Philipp W. – McEvoy, James J., Robert Grosseteste at Munich: the “Abbreviatio” by Frater Andreas, O.F.M., of the Commentaries by Robert Grosseteste on the Pseudo-Dionysius (Dallas medieval texts and translations 14), Paris etc. 2012.
  • Sauer, Hans, Angelsächsisches Erbe in München: Angelsächsische Handschriften, Schreiber und Autoren aus den Beständen der Bayerischen Staatsbibliothek in München = Anglo-Saxon heritage in Munich, Frankfurt am Main u.a. 2005.
  • Scholl, Inge, The White Rose. Munich 1942-1943, Middletown 1983.
  • Scott, Tom, The German Peasants’ War: A history in documents, Atlantic Highlands 1991.
  • Seidensticker, Tilman, How Arabic manuscripts moved to German libraries, in: Manuscript Cultures 10 (2017), 73-82. [Widmannstetter]
  • Tlusty, B. Ann (ed.), Augsburg during the Reformation era. An anthology of sources, Indianapolis etc. 2012.
  • Toorians, Lauran, The Earliest Inventory of Mexican Objects in Munich, 1572, in: Journal of the History of Collections 6 (1994), 59-67.
  • Wagner, Bettina, Bodleian Incunables from Bavarian Monasteries, in: Bodleian Library Record 15 (1995), 90-107.
  • Wagner, Bettina, “Libri impressi bibliothecae monasterii Sancti Emmerammi”. The incunable collection of St Emmeram, Regensburg, and its catalogue of 1501, in: Jensen, Kristian (ed.), Incunabula and Their Readers: Printing, Selling and Using Books in the Fifteenth Century, London 2003, 179-205.
  • Wagner, Bettina, Collecting, Cataloguing, and Digitizing Incunabula at the Bayerische Staatsbibliothek Munich, in: Papers of the Bibliographical Society of America 101 (2007), 451-479.
  • Wagner, Bettina – Booton, Diane E., Worlds of Learning: The Library and World Chronicle of the Nuremberg Physician Hartmann Schedel (1440-1514) (Ausstellungskataloge – Bayerische Staatsbibliothek 89), München 2015.
  • Waldmann, Glenys A., The Wessobrunn Prayer manuscript CLM 22053: a transliteration, translation and study of parallels, Ann Arbor 1975.
  • Wilson, Peter H., The Thirty Years War: A Sourcebook, Basingstoke etc. 2010.

Cross-Epochal

  • Applegate, Celia, A Nation of Provincials. The German Idea of Heimat, Berkeley 1990. [Bavarian Palatinate]
  • Bähr, Johannes – Banken, Ralf – Flemming, Thomas, MAN. The history of a German industrial enterprise, München 2009.
  • Bähr, Johannes – Kopper, Christopher, Munich Re. The company history 1880-1980, München 2016.
  • Bähr, Johannes – Erker, Paul – Rieder, Maximiliane, 180 Years of KraussMaffei. The History of a Global Brand, München 2018.
  • Bauernfeind, Walter – Woitek, Ulrich, Agrarian Cycles in Germany 1339-1670: A spectral analysis of grain prices and output in Nuremberg, in: Explorations in Economic History 33 (1996), 459-478.
  • Beattie, Andrew, The Danube. A cultural history (Landscapes of imagination), Oxford 2010.
  • Brockmann, Stephen, Nuremberg. The imaginary capital (Studies in german literature, linguistics, and culture), Rochester 2006.
  • Burkhard, Marianne, Stability and Adaptation: The History of St. Walburg Abbey in Eichstätt, in: American Benedictine Review 64 (2013), 178-197.
  • Dittscheid, Hans Christoph – Berger-Dittscheid, Cornelia, The Jewish settlement in Floß, Upper Palatinate (Bavaria), in: Cohen-Mushlin, Aliza – Thies, Harmen – Narkiss, Bezalel (eds.), Jewish Architecture in Europe (Schriften der Bet Tfila-Forschungsstelle für jüdische Architektur in Europa 6), Petersberg 2010, 175-188.
  • Eggenkämper, Barbara – Modert, Gerd – Pretzlik, Stefan (ed.), Allianz. The Company History 1890-2015, München 2015.
  • Flachenecker, Helmut, The Christian Landscape in Southern Germany in the Aftermath of the Reformation. Religious Separation as a Source of Regional Identity, Bindas, Kenneth J. – Ricciardelli, Fabrizio (eds.), Regional History as Cultural Identity, Roma 2017, 151-166.
  • Fouse, Gary C., Erlangen. An American’s History of a German Town, Landham etc. 2005.
  • Gaab, Jeffrey S., Munich: Hofbräuhaus & History – beer, culture, & politics, New York etc. 2006.
  • Gingerich, Josef, The Amish Mennonites in Bavaria, in: The Mennonite Quarterly Review 56 (1982), 179-188.
  • Grunert, Manfred – Triebel, Florian (eds.), BMW since 1916, München 2006.
  • Gürtler, Daniel – Urban, Markus – Jenkins, John, The Main-Danube-Canal. Idea – History – Technology, Nürnberg 2013.
  • Haas, Michaela, History of the Franciscan Sisters of Dillingen from 1241 to 1900, Lindenberg 2018.
  • Harwood, Jonathan. Technology’s Dilemma: Agricultural Colleges between Science and Practice in Germany, 1860–1934, Bern / Frankfurt / New York 2005. [among others: Munich and Weihenstephan]
  • Hiley, Ann, Regensburg. A short history, Regensburg 2013.
  • Keller, Tait, Apostles of the Alps. Mountaineering and nation building in Germany and Austria, 1860-1939, Chapel Hill 2016.
  • Klahr, Douglas, Munich as Kunststadt, 1900-1937: Art, Architecture, and Civic Identity, in: Oxford Art Journal 34 (2011), 179-201.
  • Knodel, John, Two and a Half Centuries of Demographic History in a Bavarian Village, in: Population Studies 24 (1970), 353-376. [Anhausen]
  • Lepovitz, Helena Waddy, Gateway to the Mountains: Tourism and Positive Deindustrialization in the Bavarian Alps, in: German History 7 (1989), 293-318.
  • Lepovitz, Helena Waddy, Pilgrims, Patients, and Painters: The Formation of a Tourist Culture in Bavaria, in: Historical Reflections 18 (1992), 121-145.
  • LMU (ed.), Ludwig-Maximilian University Munich, Haar bei München 22001.
  • Loester, Barbara, The Pluricentric Borders of Bavaria, in: Andrén, Mats et al. (eds.), Cultural Borders of Europe: Narratives, Concepts and Practices in the Present and the Past, New York / Oxford 2017, 85-99.
  • Mahl, Tobias, Cosmopolite meeting place and artists’ house: The Villa Waldberta. A mirror of the 20th century, München 2010.
  • Magocsi, Paul R., Historical Atlas of Central Europe. From the early fifth century to the present, London 2002.
  • Meier, Lars, Industrial, urban and worker identity transitions in Nuremberg, in: Kirk, John et al. (eds.), Changing work and community identities in European Regions. Perspectives on the Past and Present, Houndmills 2012, 23-56.
  • Michels, Eckard, Deutsch als Weltsprache? Franz Thierfelder, the Deutsche Akademie in Munich and the Promotion of the German Language Abroad, 1923-1945, in: German History 22 (2004), 206-228.
  • Mueller, Steven, The Wittelsbach Dynasty, Broadview 2007.
  • Pindl, Kathrin, Grain policies and storage in Southern Germany: The Regensburg Hospital (17th-19th centuries), in: Jahrbuch für Wirtschaftsgeschichte 59 (2018), 415-445.
  • Ó Riain, Diarmuid, An Irish Jerusalem in Franconia: The Abbey of the Holy Cross and Holy Sepulchre at Eichstätt, in: Proceedings of the Royal Irish Academy. Section C: Archaeology, Celtic Studies, History, Linguistics, Literature 112 (2012), 219-270.
  • Ó Riain, Diarmuid, The Schottenklöster in the World: Identity, Independence and Integration, in: Hovden, Eirik – Lutter, Christina – Pohl, Walter (eds.), Meanings of Community across Medieval Eurasia: Comparative Approaches, Leiden / Boston 2016, 388-416. [Focus on Bavaria]
  • O`Sullivan, Michael E., Disruptive Power. Catholic Women, Miracles, and Politics in Modern Germany, 1918-1965, Toronto 2018. [Therese Neumann of Konnersreuth]
  • Rosenbaum, Adam T., Timeless, Modern, and German? The Re-Mapping of Bavaria through the Marketing of Tourism, 1800-1939, in: Bulletin of the German Historical Institute, Washington D.C. 52 (2013), 37-54
  • Rosenbaum, Adam T., Bavarian tourism and the modern world 1800-1950, New York 2016.
  • Rudnytzky, Leonid, Ukrainian Free University of Munich – 90th Anniversary: Crescat scientia, vita excolatur, in: Ukrainian Quarterly 67 (2011), 99-106.
  • Smith, Jeffrey, The changing American perceptions of Nuremberg and its artistic heritage, in: Maué, Hermann et al. (ed.), Quasi centrum Europae, Nürnberg 2002, 17-43.
  • Spotts, Frederic, Bayreuth: A History of the Wagner Festival, New Haven / London 1994.
  • Stein, Mary Beth, Wilhelm Heinrich Riehl and the Scientific-Literary Formation of “Volkskunde”, in: German Studies Review 24 (2001), 487-512.
  • Storm, Eric, The culture of regionalism. Art, architecture and international exhibitions in France, Germany and Spain, 1890-1939, Manchester etc. 2010.
  • Umbach, Maiken, German Federalism. Past, Present, Future, Basingstoke etc. 2002.
  • Vorländer, Hermann, Church in Motion. The History of the Evangelical Lutheran Mission in Bavaria (Missional Church, Public Theology, World Christianity 8), Eugene/Oregon 2018.
  • Wagner, Jonathan F., The Hard Lessons of a Political Life: The Career of Socialist Hans Dill (1887-1973), in: Internationale Wissenschaftliche Korrespondenz zur Geschichte der Deutschen Arbeiterbewegung 29 (1993), 194-207.
  • Wetmore, Kevin J., The Oberammergau Passion Play. Essays on the 2010 performance and the centuries-long tradition, Jefferson / NC 2017.
  • Wheatley, Paul, Munich. From Monks to Modernity, München 2010.
  •  

9th to 13th Century: Early and High Middle Ages

  • Airlie, Stuart, Narratives of triumph and rituals of submission: Charlemagne’s mastering of Bavaria, in: Transactions of the Royal Historical Society ser.6,9 (1999), 93-119.
  • Airlie, Stuart, The Nearly Men: Boso of Vienne and Arnulf of Bavaria, in: Duggan, Anne (ed.), Nobles and Nobility in Medieval Europe. Concepts, Origins, Transformations, Woodbridge 2000, 25-42.
  • Airlie, Stuart, True teachers and pious kings: Salzburg, Louis the German, and Christian order, in: Gameson, Richard – Leyser, Henrietta (eds.), Belief and Culture in the Middle Ages: Studies presented to Henry Mayr-Harting, Oxford 2001, 89-105.
  • Agus, Irving A., Rabbi Meir of Rothenburg: his life and his works as sources for the religious, legal, and social history of the Jews of Germany in the thirteenth century. Two volumes in one, New York 21970.
  • Alexander, Paul J., The Papacy, the Bavarian Clergy and the Slavonic Apostles, in: Slavonic and East European Review 20 (1971), 266-293.
  • Arnold, Benjamin, Count and bishop in medieval Germany. A study of regional power 1100-1350, Philadelphia 1991. [Eichstätt]
  • Beach, Alison I., Claustration and collaboration between the sexes in the twelfth-century scriptorium, in: Farmer, Sharon – Rosenwein, Barbara H. (eds.), Monks and Nuns, Saints and Outcasts: Religion in Medieval Society. Essays in Honor of Lester K. Little, Ithaca 2000, 57-75. [Admont and Schäftlarn]
  • Beach, Alison I., Women as scribes. Book production and monastic reform in twelfth-century Bavaria, Cambridge u.a. 2004.
  • Bennett, Camille E., Historiography as historical event: Otto of Freising’s use of the past for religious restoration, PhD. Cornell University 1985.
  • Bernhardt, John W., King Henry II of Germany: royal self-representation and historical memory, in: Althoff, Gerd – Fried, Johannes – Geary, Patrick J. (ed.), Medieval concepts of the past: ritual, memory, historiography, Washington DC 2002, 39-69.
  • Brown, Warren, The use of norms in disputes in early medieval Bavaria, in: Viator. Medieval and Renaissance Studies 30 (1999), 15-40.
  • Brown, Warren, Unjust Seizure: Conflict, Interest, and Authority in an Early Medieval Society, Ithaca u.a. 2001.
  • Brown, Warren, The idea of Empire in Carolingian Bavaria, in: Weiler, Björn (ed.), Representations of Power in medieval Germany 800-1500 (International Medieval Research 16), Turnhout 2006, 37-55.
  • Bowlus, Charles R., Italia – Bavaria- Avaria: The Grand Strategy behind Charlemagne’s Renovatio Imperii in the West, in: Journal of Medieval Military History 1 (2002), 43-60.
  • Bowlus, Charles R., The Battle of Lechfeld and its Aftermath, August 955. The End of the Age of Migrations in the Latin West, Aldershot 2006.
  • Chinca, Mark, Uses of the past in twelfth-century Germany: The case of the middle high german Kaiserchronik, in: Central European History 49 (2016), 19-38.
  • Cohen, Adam S., The Art of Reform in a Bavarian Nunnery around 1000, in: Speculum 74 (1999), 992-1020. [Niedermünster]
  • Couser, Jonathan, A Usable Past: early Bavarian Hagiography in Context, in: Studies in Medieval and Renaissance History ser. 3 4 (2007), 1-56.
  • Couser, Jonathan, Inventing Paganism in Eighth-Century Bavaria, in: Early Medieval Europe 18 (2010), 26-42.
  • Couser, Jonathan, The changing fortunes of early medieval Bavaria to 907 AD, in: History Compass 8 (2010), 330-344.
  • Couser, Jonathan, “Let Them Make Him Duke to Rule that People”: The “Law of the Bavarians” and Regime Change in Early Medieval Europe, in: Law and History Review 30 (2012), 865-899.
  • Diesenberger, Maximilian, Repertoires and Strategies in Bavaria: Hagiography, in: Pohl, Walter – Heydemann, Gerda (eds.), Strategies of Identification. Ethnicity and Religion in Early Medieval Europe (Cultural Encounters in Late Antiquity and the Middle Ages 13), Turnhout 2013, 209-232.
  • Diesenberger, Maximilian u.a. (ed.), The Prague Sacramentary. Culture, Religion, and Politics in late Eight-Century Bavaria, Turnhout 2016.
  • Dilworth, Mark, The first Scottish monks in Ratisbon, in: The Innes Review 16 (1965), 180-198.
  • Dockray-Miller, Mary, The Books and the Life of Judith of Flanders, Farnham etc. 2015.
  • DuBruck, Edelgard et al. (ed.), Crossroads of medieval civilization: The City of Regensburg and its intellectual milieu. A collection of essays (Medieval and Renaissance monograph series 5), Detroit 1984.
  • Ettel, Peter, Karlburg am Main (Bavaria) and its role as a local centre in the late Merovingian and Ottonian periods, in: Henning, Joachim (ed.), Post-Roman Towns, Trade and Settlement in Europe and Byzantium, Vol. 1: The Heirs of the Roman West (Millennium-Studien 5), Berlin etc. 2007, 319-340.
  • Fehr, Hubert – Heitmeier, Irmtraut, Introduction and summary: A quarter of a century later …, in: Ibid. (eds.), Die Anfänge Bayerns. Von Raetien und Noricum zur frühmittelalterlichen Baiovaria (Bayerische Landesgeschichte und europäische Regionalgeschichte 1), 665-672.
  • Flint, Valerie I., The career of Honorius Augustodunensis: some fresh evidence, in: Revue Bénédictine 82 (1972), 63-83.
  • Flint, Valerie I., The chronologie of the works of Honorius Augustodunensis, in: Revue Bénédictine 82 (1972), 215-242.
  • Flint, Valerie I., Anti-Jewish literature and attitudes in the twelfth century, in: The Journal of Jewish Studies 37 (1986), 183-205.
  • Freed, John B., The Counts of Falkenstein. Noble self-consciousness in 12th-century Germany (American Philosophical Society: Transactions of the American Philosophical Society 74,6), Philadelphia 1984.
  • Freed, John B., Artistic and literary representations of family consciousness, in: Althoff, Gerd – Fried, Johannes – Geary, Patrick J. (eds.), Medieval Concepts of the Past: Ritual, Memory, Historiography (Publications of the German Historical Institute), Washington D.C. 2002, 233-252.
  • Freed, John B., Bavarian wine and woolless sheep. The “Urbar” of Count Sigiboto IV of Falkenstein (1126-ca. 1198), in: Viator 35 (2004), 71-112.
  • Freed, John B., The creation of the “Codex Falkensteinensis” (1166). Self-representation and reality, in: Weiler, Björn – MacLean, Simon (eds.), Representations of power in medieval Germany 800-1500 (International medieval research 16), Turnhout 2006, 189-210.
  • Fries-Knoblach, Janine – Steuer, Heiko (eds.), The Baiuvarii and Thuringi. An ethnographic perspective (Studies in historical archaeoethnology 9), Woodbridge 2014.
  • Geary, Patrick H. – Freed, John B., Literacy and Violence in twelth-century Bavaria: The “murder letter” of Count Sibito IV, in: Viator 25 (1994), 115-129.
  • Godthardt, Frank, The Philosopher as Political Actor – Marsilius of Padua at the Court of Ludwig the Bavarian: The Sources Revisited, in: Moreno-Riaño, Gerson, The World of Marsilius of Padua (Disputatio 5), Turnhout 2006, 29-46.
  • Grabowski, Antoni T., The “Duel” between Henry I and Arnulf of Bavaria according to Liudprand of Cremona, in: Czaja, Roman – Mühle, Eduard – Radziminski, Andrzej (eds.), Konfliktbewältigung und Friedensstiftung im Mittelalter – Przezwyciężanie konfliktów i ustanawianie pokoju w Średniowieczu, Torun 2012, 387-400.
  • Haas-Gebhard, Brigitte, The Unterhaching grave finds: Richly dressed burials from sixth-century Bavaria, in: Netherton, Robin – Owen-Crocker, Gale R. (eds.), Medieval Clothing and Textiles, Woodbridge 2012, 1-23.
  • Hakenbeck, Susanne, Local, regional and ethnic identities in early medieval cemeteries in Bavaria, Florenz 2011.
  • Hammer, Carl I., Country Churches, Clerical Inventories and the Carolingian Renaissance in Bavaria, in: Church History: Studies in Christianity and Culture 49 (1980), 5-17.
  • Hammer, Carl I., Family and familia in early-medieval Bavaria, in: Wall, Richard – Robin, Jean – Laslett, Peter (eds.), Peter Family Forms in Historic Europe, Cambridge 1983, 217-248.
  • Hammer, Carl I., Servile names and seigneurial organization in early-medieval Bavaria, in: Studi Medievali ser. 3 36 (1995), 903-915.
  • Hammer, Carl I., The Handmaid’s Tale. Morganatic relationships in early-medieval Bavaria, in: Continuity and Change 10 (1995), 345-368.
  • Hammer, Carl I., Land sales in eight- and ninth-century Bavaria: Legal, economic, and social aspects, in: Early Medieval Europe 6 (1997), 47-76.
  • Hammer, Carl I., A large-scale Slave Society of the Early Middle Ages: Slaves and their Families in Early Medieval Bavaria, Aldershotu.a. 2002.
  • Hammer, Carl I., “For all the Saints”. Bishop Vivolo of Passau and the eighth-century origins of the feast, in: Revue Mabillon: Revue internationale d’histoire et de littérature religieuses 15 (2004), 5-26.
  • Hammer, Carl I., Arbeo of Freising’s Life and Passion of St. Emmeram. The martyr and his critics, in: Revue d’histoire ecclésiastique 101 (2006), 5-36.
  • Hammer, Carl I., From Ducatus to Regnum: Ruling Bavaria under the Merovingians and Early Carolingians, Turnhout 2007.
  • Hammer, Carl I,, Crowding the King: Rebellion and Political Violence in Late Carolingian Bavaria and Italy, in: Studimedievali 48 (2007), 493-541.
  • Hammer, Carl I., “A suitable place for putting up a mill”. Water power landscapes and structures in Carolingian Bavaria, in: Vierteljahrschrift für Sozial- und Wirtschaftsgeschichte 95 (2008), 319-334.
  • Hammer, Carl I., “Pipinus Rex”: Pippin’s plot of 792 and Bavaria, in: Traditio 63 (2008), 235-276.
  • Hammer, Carl I., Hoc and Hnaef in Bavaria? Early-medieval prosopography and heroic poetry, in: Medieval Prosopography: History and Collective Biography 26 (2009), 13-50.
  • Hammer, Carl I., Early Merovingian Bavaria. A late antique Italian Perspective, in: Journal of Late Antiquity 4 (2011), 217-244.
  • Hammer, Carl I., Town and Country in early-medieval Bavaria. Two studies in urban and comital structure, Oxford 2012.
  • Hammer, Carl I., Huosiland. A Small Country in Carolingian Europe, Oxford 2018.
  • Hardt, Michael, The Bavarians, in: Goetz, Hans Werner et al. (eds.), Regna and Gentes. The relationship between late antique and early medieval peoples and kingdoms in the transformation of the Roman world (The Transformation of the Roman World 13), Leiden etc. 2003, 429-461.
  • Hubby, John Clifton, Lordship and Rural Society in Medieval Bavaria. The Estates of the Abbey of Tegernsee, c. 979-c. 1450, PhD Columbia University 2000.
  • Kohl, Thomas, “Presbyter in parochia sua”: Local Priests and their Churches in Early Medieval Bavaria, in: Patzold, Steffen – van Rhijn, Carine (eds.), Men in the Middle: Local Priests in Early Medieval Europe (Reallexikon der Germanischen Altertumskunde, Ergänzungsbände 93), Berlin / Boston 2016, 50-77.
  • Kulzer, Linda, Erentrude: Nonnberg, Eichstätt, America, in: Schmitt, Miriam – Ibid. (eds.), Medieval Women Monastics: Wisdom’s Wellsprings, Collegeville 1996, 49-61.
  • Kyle, Joseph D., Sankt St. Emmeran, Regensburg, as a center of culture in the late tenth century, Diss. Pittsburgh 1976.
  • Lavoie, Raymond V., Saints, kings, and religious reformers. Texts, social ties, and identity in the religious communities of eleventh- and twelfth-century Regensburg, PhD. Los Angeles 1999.
  • Lifshits, Yosef Yitsḥaḳ, Rabbi Meir of Rothenburg and the Foundation of Jewish Political Thought, Cambridge 2016.
  • Lyon, Jonathan R, Cooperation, compromise and conflict avoidance: Family relationships in the House of Andechs, ca. 1100-1204, PhD. Notre Dame / Indiana 2004.
  • Merta, Brigitte, Why royal charters? A look at theiruse in Carolingian Bavaria, in: Pohl, Walter (ed.), Vom Nutzen des Schreibens: Soziales Gedächtnis, Herrschaft und Besitz im Mittelalter (Forschungen zur Geschichte des Mittelalters 5), Wien 2002, 183-191.
  • Mews, Constant J., Accusation of Heresy and Error in the Twelth-Century Schools: The Witness of Gerhoh of Reichersberg and Otto of Freising, in: Hunter, Ian – Laursen, John Christian – Nederman, Cary J. (eds.), Heresy in Transition. Transforming Ideas of Heresy in Medieval and Early Modern Europe, London / New York 2005, 43-58.
  • Nelson, Janet L., Staging integration in Bavaria, 791-793, in: Pohl, Walter – Diesenberger, Maximilian – Zeller, Bernhard (eds.), Neue Wege der Frühmittelalterforschung – Bilanz und Perspektiven (Forschungen zur Geschichte des Mittelalters 22), Wien 2018, 225-237.
  • Notari, Tamás, On Bishop Virgil’s Litigations in Bavaria, in: Acta Juridica Hungarica 48 (2007), 49-71.
  • Notari, Tamás, Bavarian Historiography in Early Medieval Salzburg, Passau 2010.
  • Notari, Tamás, Criminal Law in Lex Baiuvariorum, in: Acta Universitatis Sapientiae, Legal Studies 2 (2013), 67-90.
  • Notari, Tamás, Law and Society in Lex Baiuvariorum, Passau 2014.
  • Obrist, Barbara, Cosmological iconography in twelfth-century Bavaria. The earthly zones and their circling serpent in Munich, Bayerische Staatsbibliothek, CLM 7785, in: Studi Medievali ser. 3 48 (2007), 543-574.
  • Parsons, David, Some churches of the Anglo-Saxon missionaries in southern Germany: a review of the evidence, in: Early Medieval Europe 8 (1999), 31-67. [Eichstätt, Solnhofen]
  • Pearson, Kathy Lynne, Land and family in Bavaria: A social history of the landowning class in the eight and ninth centuries, PhD. Emory University 1990.
  • Pearson, Kathy Lynne, Rulers, magnates, and outsiders in Bavaria and its marches, in: Gosman, Martin – Vanderjagt, Arjo – Veenstra, Jan (eds.), The Propagation of Power in the Medieval West: Selected Proceedings of the International Conference, Groningen 20-23 November 1996 (Mediaevalia Groningana, 23), Groningen 1997, 177-189.
  • Pearson, Kathy Lynne, Conflicting loyalities in early medieval Bavaria. A view of social-political interaction, 680-900, Aldershot 1999.
  • Phelan, Owen M., The Carolingian Renewal and Christian Formation in ninth-century Bavaria, in: Corradini, Richard et al. (eds.), Texts andidentities in the Early Middle Ages (Forschungen zur Geschichte des Mittelalters 12), Wien 2006, 389-399.
  • Pohl, Walter – Diesenberger, Maximilian (eds.), Eugippius und Severin. Der Autor, der Text und der Heilige (Forschungen zur Geschichte des Mittelalters 2), Wien 2001 [5 articles in English]
  • Reuter, Timothy, Charlemagne and the world beyond the Rhine, in: Story, Joanna (ed.), Charlemagne: Empire and Society, Manchester 2005, 183-194.
  • Rivers, Theodore John, Contributions to the criticism and interpretation of the Lex Baiuvariorum: Acomparative study of the Alamannic and Bavarian codes, PhD. New York 1973.
  • Scharer, Anton, Duke Tassilo of Bavaria and the Origins of the Rupertus Cross, in: Gameson, Richard – Leyser, Henrietta (ed.), Belief and culture in the Middle Ages. Studies presented to Henry Mayr-Harting, Oxford 2001, 69-75.
  • Scharer, Anton, Bishops in Ottonian Bavaria, in: Ibid. (ed.), Changing Perspectives on England and the Continent in the Early Middle Ages (Variroum Collected Studies Series 1042), Farnham 2014, 1-17.
  • Schmitt, Miriam, St. Irmengard: no poor on the isle of Chiemsee, in: Ibid.Kulzer, Lina (eds.), Medieval Women Monastics: Wisdom’s Wellsprings, Collegeville 1996, 117-134.
  • Schmitz-Esser, Romedio, The Bishop and the Emperor: tracing narrative intent in Otto of Freising’s “Gesta Frederici”, in: The Medieval Chronicle 9 (2014), 297-324.
  • Toch, Michael, The formation of a Diaspora: the settlement of Jews in the medieval German “Reich”, in: Aschkenas 7 (1997), 55-78.
  • Toch, Michael, The peasant community and its laws: Medieval Bavaria, in: Hen, Yitzhak (ed.), De sionexibitlex et verbum domini de Hierusalem (Cultural encounters in late antiquity and the middle ages 1), Turnhout 2001, 183-196.
  • Walter, James K., The Upper German Servatius. Secular Influences on the Art of a Saint’s Life in the late Twelfth Century, in: Hintz, Ernst Ralf (ed.), Nu lôn’ ich iu der gâbe: Festschrift for Francis G. Gentry (Göppinger Arbeiten zur Germanistik 693), Göppingen 2003, 285-298.
  • Weber, Andreas Otto, The organisation of wine-production and wine-transport in the Middle Ages: the example of Bavarian monasteries and their vineyards in Bavaria, Austria, and South Tyrol and general conclusions on comparative wine-history, in: Maldonado, Javier (ed.), Actas del I Simposio de la Asociación Internacional de Historia y Civilización de la Vid y el Vino, 1999, El Puerto de Santa María 2001, 435-444.
  • Winckler, Katharina, Romanness at the Fringes of the Frankish Empire: The Strange Case of Bavaria, in: Pohl, Walter et al. (eds.), Transformations of Romanness. Early Medieval Regions and Identities, Berlin / Boston 2018, 419-436.
  • Wolfram, Herwig, Bavaria in the tenth and early eleventh century, in: McKitterick, Rosamond (ed.), The new Cambridge medieval history. Volume 3, Cambridge 1999, 293-309.
  • Wood, Ian, The Missionary Life. Saints and the evangelization of Europe, 400-1050, Milton Park / New York 2001. [Virgil, Rupert, Korbinian, Arbeo, Kilian]
  • Wright, Stephen K., Was there a twelfth-century play at St. Emmeram? in: Medieval English Theatre 18 (1998), 74-84.
  •  

13th to 15th Centuries: Late Middle Ages

  • Adamson, Melitta Weiss, Lost in translation? The arrival of Byzantine viniculture in fifteenth-century Bavaria, in: Medium Aevum Quotidianum 67 (2014), 26-36.
  • Boer, Dick E.H. de, Ludwig the Bavarian and the Scholars, in: Drijvers, Jan Willem – MacDonald, Alasdair A. (eds.), Centres of Learning: Learning and Location in Pre-Modern Europe and the Near East (Brill’s Studies in Intellectual History 61), Leiden 1995, 229-244.
  • Brown, Thomas Andrew, Ludwig the Bavarian and the German estates, PhD. Syracuse University 1975.
  • Cassidy-Welch, Megan, Pilgrimage and embodiment: captives and the cult of saints in late medieval Bavaria, in: Parergon. Journal of the Australian and New Zealand Association for Medieval and Early Modern Studies 20 (2003), 47-70. [Inchenhofen]
  • Erb, James R., Fictions, realities and the fifteenth-century Nuremberg “Fastnachtspiel”, Eisenbichler, Konrad et al. (eds.), Carnival and the carnivalesque (Ludus 4), Amsterdam etc. 1999, 89-116.
  • Flachenecker, Helmut, Eichstätt: abbey, diocese, lordship, in: Loud, Graham A. – Schenk, Jochen (eds.), The Origins of the German Principalities, 1100-1350. Essays by German Historians, London – New York 2017, 121-136.
  • Ghosh, Shami, Rural commercialisation in fourteenth-century southern Germany: The evidence from Scheyern Abbey, in: Vierteljahrschrift für Wirtschafts- und Sozialgeschichte 104 (2017), 52-77.
  • Graf, Wolfgang, Nürnberg: World-Trade-Center forspice, in: Protzner, Wolfgang – Köglmaier-Horn, Christiane (eds.), Culina Franconiae (Beiträge zur Wirtschafts- und Sozialgeschichte 109), 73-90.
  • Groebner, Valentin, Black money and the language of things: Observations on the economy of the labouring poor in late fifteenth-century Nuremberg, in: Tel Aviver Jahrbuch für Deutsche Geschichte 22 (1993), 275-291.
  • Groos, Arthur, The city as community and space: Nuremberg Stadtlob, 1447-1530, in: Stock, Markus – Vöhringer, Nicola (eds.), Spatial practices: medieval / modern (Transatlantische Studien zu Mittelalter und Früher Neuzeit 6), Göttingen 2014, 187-206.
  • Hoffmann, Richard C., Fishers in late medieval rural society around Tegernsee, Bavaria: a preliminary sketch, in: DeWindt, Edwin Brezette – Raftis, James Ambrose (eds.), The Salt of Common Life: Individuality and Choice in the Medieval Town, Countryside and Church. Essays Presented to J. Ambrose Raftis (Studies in Medieval Culture 36), Kalamazoo 1995, 371-408.
  • Klepper, Deeana Copeland, Pastoral literature in local context: Albert of Diessen’s Mirror of Priests on Christian-Jewish coexistence, in: Speculum: A Journal of Medieval Studies 92 (2017), 692-723.
  • Liebhart, Wilhelm, 500 years Birgittine Convent Altomünster (1497-1997), in: Brigittiana 2 (1996), 223-234.
  • Lutter, Christina, The Babenbergs: from frontier march to principality, in: Loud, Graham A. – Schenk, Jochen (eds.), The Origins of the German Principalities, 1100-1350. Essays by German Historians, London – New York 2017, 312-328.
  • McQuillen, John T., In manuscript and print. The fifteenth-century library of Scheyern Abbey, PhD. Toronto 2012.
  • Merback, Mitchell B., Cleansing the Temple. The Munich Gruftkirche as converted synagogue, in: Ibid. (ed.), Beyond the yellow badge. Anti-Judaism and antisemitism in Medieval and early modern visual culture (Brill’s series in Jewish studies 37), 305-345.
  • Meyer-Schlenkrich, Carla, The Imperial City: The example of Nuremberg, in: Loud, Graham A. – Schenk, Jochen (eds.), The Origins of the German Principalities, 1100-1350. Essays by German Historians, London – New York 2017, 68-82.
  • Miller, Michael L., The Bavarian Episcopacy in the Fourteenth Century, PhD. Ohio State University 1980.
  • Minagawa, Taku, Border conflicts between Bohemia and Bavaria and their solutions. Comparative considerations, in: Bellabarba, Marco – Obermair, Hannes (eds.), Communities and conflicts in the Alps from the late Middle Ages to Early Modernity (Annali dell’Istituto Storico Italo-Germanico in Trento / Contributi 30), Berlin / Bologna 2015, 73-90.
  • Miner, John N., Change and Continutiy in the Schools of Later Medieval Nuremberg, in: The Catholic Historical Review 73 (1987), 1-22.
  • Mixson, James D., Poverty’s Proprietors: Ownership and Mortal Sin at the Origins of the Observant Movement (Studies in the history of Christian Traditions 143), Leiden etc. 2009.
  • Modestin, Georg, The Making of a Heretic: Pope John XXII’s campaign against Louis of Bavaria, in: Bailey, Michael D. – Field, Sean L. (eds.), Late Medieval heresy: New perspectives. Studies in honor of Robert E. Lerner, Rochester/NY 2018, 76-95.
  • Moody, D. Branch, Healing Power in the Marian Miracle Books of Bavarian Healing Shrines, 1489-1523, in: Journal of the History of Medicine & Allied Sciences 47 (1992), 68-90.
  • Olesen, Jens E., Christopher of Bavaria, King of Denmark, Norway and Sweden (1440-1448): Scandinavia and Southern Germany in the 15th century, in: Ibid. (ed.), Erich von Pommern und Christopher von Bayern – Studien zur Kalmarer Union (Publikationen des Lehrstuhls für Nordische Geschichte 21), Greifswald 2016, 239-269.
  • Pope, Ben, Nuremberg’s Noble Servant: Werner von Parsberg (d. 1455) between Town and Nobility in Late Medieval Germany, in: German History 36 (2018), 159-180.
  • Rasmussen, Ann Marie, Reading in Nuremberg’s fifteenth-century carnival plays, in: Downing, Eric et al. (ed.), Literary studies and the pursuits of reading, Rochester 2012, 68-83.
  • Reinle, Christine, Peasants’ feuds in medieval Bavaria (fourteenth-fifteenth century), in: Netterstrøm, Jeppe – Poulsen, Bjørn (eds.), Feud in Medieval and Early Modern Europe., Aarhus 2007, 161-174.
  • Sargent, Steven D., Religion and society in late medieval Bavaria: The cult of Saint Leonard, 1258-1500, PhD. University of Pennsylvania 1982.
  • Sargent, Steven D., Miracle Books and Pilgrimage Shrines in Late Medieval Bavaria, in: Historical Reflections 13 (1986), 455-471.
  • Scales, Len, Wenceslas Looks Out: Monarchy, Locality, and the Symbolism of Power in Fourteenth-Century Bavaria, in: Central European History 52 (2019), 179-210.
  • Schmidt, Peter, The use of prints in German convents of the fifteenth century: the example of Nuremberg, in: Studies in iconography 24 (2003), 43-69.
  • Sheffler, David L., Schools and schooling in late medieval Germany: Regensburg, 1250-1500 (Education and society in the Middle Ages and Renaissance 33), Leiden etc. 2008.
  • Simon, Anne, The cult of Saint Katherine of Alexandria in late-medieval Nuremberg: Saint and the City, Farnham etc. 2012.
  • Smelyansky, Eugene, Urban order and urban other: Anti-Waldensian inquisition in Augsburg, 1393, in: German History 34 (2016), 1-20.
  • Stromer von Reichenbach, Wolfgang, Nuremberg in the international economics of the Middle Ages, in: Business History Review 44 (1970), 210-221.
  • Stromer von Reichenbach, Wolfgang, Muremberg as Epicentre of Invention and Innovation towards the End of the Middle Age, in: History of Technology 19 (1997), 19-45.
  • Toch, Michael, Local credit in an agrarian economy: the case of Bavaria, 14th to 15th centuries, in: Ibid. (ed.), Peasants and Jews in medieval Germany. Studies in cultural, social, and economic history (Collected studies series 757), Burlington 2003, 793-803.
  • Toch, Michael, Hauling away in late medieval Bavaria. The economics of inland transport in an agrarian market, in: Ibid. (ed.), Peasants and Jews in medieval Germany.Studies in cultural, social, and economic history (Collected studies series 757), Burlington 2003, 111-123.
  • Toch, Michael, Ethics, emotion and self-interest: rural Bavaria in the later middle ages, in: Ibid. (ed.), Peasants and Jews in medieval Germany. Studies in cultural, social, and economic history (Collected studies series 757), Burlington 2003, 135-147. [Indersdorf]
  • Wagner, Bettina, The Windberg Accounts. A Premonstratensian Monastery and its Library in the 15th century, in: Bibliologia 3 (2008), 17-34.
  • Weiß, Dieter J., Spiritual life in the Teutonic order. A comparison between the commanderies of Franconia and Prussia, in: Luttrell, Anthony (ed.), La commanderie. Institution des ordres militaires dans l’Occident medieval (Archélogie et d’histoire de l’art14), Paris 2002, 159-173.
  • Westphal-Wihl, Sarah, Kunigunde of Bavaria and the “Conquest of Regensburg”. Politics, gender, and the public sphere in 1489, in: Emden, Christian J. et al. (eds.), Changing perceptions of the public sphere, New York etc. 2012, 35-56.
  • Wranovix, Matthew, Priests and Their Books in Late Medieval Eichstätt, Lanham 2017.
  •  

16th to 18th Century: Early Modern Ages (General)

  • Berger, Albrecht, Byzantium in Bavaria, in: Marciniak, Przemyslaw – Smythe, Dion C. (eds.), The Reception of Byzantium in European culture since 1500, Farnham etc. 2016, 115-131.
  • Bubenik, Andrea, Reframing Albrecht Dürer. The Appropriation of Art, 1528-1700, Farnham etc. 2013.
  • Babel, Rainer, The courts of the Wittelsbachs c. 1500-1750. The duchy of Bavaria, in: Adamson, John (ed.), The princely courts of Europe. Ritual, politics and culture under the Ancien Régime 1500 – 1750, London 1999, 188-209.
  • Becker, Rainald, New worlds turning southern German: Knowledge of the Americas in Early Modern Bavaria, in: Lachenicht, Susanne (ed.), Europeans engaging the Atlantic. Knowledge and Trade 1500-1800, Frankfurt am Main etc. 2014, 89-109.
  • Becker, Rainald, Catholic Print Cultures: German Jesuits and Colonial North America, in: Scheiding, Oliver – Bassimir, Anja Maria (ed.), Religious periodicals and publishing in transnational contexts, Cambridge 2017, 25-48.
  • Behringer, Wolfgang, Witchcraft prosecution in Bavaria. Popular Magic, Religious Zealotry and Reason of State in Early Modern Europe, Cambridge 1997.
  • Blickle, Renate, From Subsistence to Property: Traces of a Fundamental Change in Early Modern Bavaria, in: Central European History 25 (1992), 377-385.
  • Creasman, Allyson F., Side-stepping the censor. The clandestine trade in prohibited texts in early modern Augsburg, in: Crane, Mark et al. (eds.), Shell games. Studies in scams, frauds, and deceits (1300-1650), Toronto 2004, 211-237.
  • Dahlem, Andreas, Late Fifteenth Century Architectural Manifestations of Ducal Authority in the Vicinity of Munich, in: Anderson, Emily Jane (ed.), Visible Exports / Imports. New Research on Medieval and Renaissance European Art and Culture, Newcastle upon Tyne 2012, 239-259.
  • Dilworth, Mark, Benedictine monks of Ratisbon and Wurzburg in the 17th and 18th centuries, emigres from the highlands of Scotland, in: Transactions of the Gaelic Society of Inverness 44 (1965), 94-110.
  • Dilworth, Mark, The Scots in Franconia. A century of monastic life, Edinburgh etc. 1974.
  • Durrant, Jonathan B., Witchcraft, gender and society in early modern Germany (Studies in medieval and reformation traditions 124), Leiden 2007 [Prince-Bishopric of Eichstätt]
  • Gantet, Claire, Peace festivals and the culture of memory in early modern South German Cities, in: Friedrich, Karin (ed.), Festive Culture in Germany and Europe from the sixteenth to the twentieth century, Lewiston etc. 2000, 57-71.
  • Corpis, Duane J., Mapping the boundaries of confession: space and urban religious life in the diocese of Augsburg, 1648-1750, in: Coster, Will – Spicer, Andrew (ed.), Sacred space in early modern Europe, Cambridge etc. 2005, 302-325.
  • Corpis, Duane J., Marian Pilgrimage and the Performance of Male Privilege in Eighteenth-Century Augsburg, in: Central European History 45 (2012), 375-406.
  • Corpis, Duane J., Crossing the boundaries of belief. Geographies of religious conversion in southern Germany, 1648-1800 (Studies in early modern German history), Charlottesville 2014.
  • Forster, Marc R., Catholic Germany from the Reformation to the Enlightenment (European History in Perspective), Basingstoke 2007.
  • Harrington, Joel F., “Singing for his supper”: the reinvention of juvenile streetsinging in early modern Nuremberg, in: Social History 22 (1997), 27-45.
  • Harrington, Joel F., Tortured truths: the self-expositions of a juvenile career criminal in early modern Nuremberg, in: German History 23 (2005), 143-171.
  • Harrington, Joel F., An unmarried mother-to-be weighs her options in sixteenth-century Nuremberg, in: Studies in Medieval & Renaissance History 2 (2005), 149-203.
  • Harrington, Joel F., Child circulation within the early modern urban community: rejection and support of unwanted children in Nuremberg, in: Halvorson, Michael F. – Spierling, Karen E. (ed.), Defining Community in early modern Europe, Aldershot 2008, 103-120.
  • Harrington, Joel F., The unwanted child: the fate of foundlings, orphans, and juvenile criminals in early modern Germany, Chicago etc. 2009. [Nürnberg]
  • Heal, Bridget, The cult of the Virgin Mary in early modern Germany. Protestant and Catholic piety, 1500-1648, Cambridge etc. 2009.
  • Hörger, Hermann, Organisational Forms of Popular Piety in Rural Old Bavaria (Sixteenth to Nineteenth Centuries), in: Greyerz, Kaspar von (ed.), Religion and Society in Early Modern Europe, 1500-1800, Boston 1984, 212-222.
  • Kägler, Britta, Competition at the Catholic Court of Munich: Italian musicians and family networks, in: zur Nieden, Gesa – Over, Berthold (eds.), Musicians’ mobilities and music migrations in early modern Europe, Bielefeld 2016, 73-90.
  • Kägler, Britta, Manifestations of trust – Medical careers at the Munich court in early modern times, in: Medizinhistorisches Journal 53 (2018), 217-240.
  • Kammerling, Joy Margaret, Andreas Osiander and the Jews of Nuremberg: A Reformation Pastor and Jewish Toleration in Sixteenth-Century Germany, PhD. Univerity of Illinois 1995.
  • Kießling, Rolf, Between expulsion and emancipation: Jewish Villages in east Suabia during early modern period, in: Shofar 15 (1997), 59-87.
  • Klingensmith, Samuel Jon, The Utility of Splendor: Ceremony, Social Life and Architecture at the Court of Bavaria 1600-1800, Chicago u.a. 1993.
  • Knox, Ellis Lee, The guilds of early modern Augsburg. A study in urban institutions, PhD. University of Massachuetts 1984.
  • Kümin, Beat, Rural Autonomy and Popular Politics in Imperial Villages, in: German History 33 (2015), 194-213. [Gochsheim, Sennfeld]
  • Lederer, David, Living with the Dead. Ghosts in Early Modern Bavaria, in: Edwards, Kathryn A. (ed.), Werewolves, Witches, and Wandering Spirits. Traditional Believs& Folklore in Early Modern Europe (Sixteenth Century Essays & Studies 62), Kirksville / MS 2002, 25-53.
  • Lederer, David, Madness, Religion and the State in Early Modern Europe: A Bavarian Beacon, Cambridge u.a. 2006.
  • Lewis, Margaret Brennan, Infanticide and Abortion in Early Modern Germany (The body, gender and culture 19), London / New York 2016. [Augsburg]
  • Lidman, Satu, To report or not? To punish or not? Between tightening laws, old habits and loyalty in Early Modern Bavaria, in: Matikainen, Olli (ed.), Morality, Crime and Social Control in Europe 1500-1900 (Studia historica 84), Helsinki 2014, 87-106.
  • Meier, Hans, Welfare and health of children and adolescents in early modern England and Southern Germany: case studies of Bampton (Oxfordshire) and Oettingen (Southern Germany) in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries, PhD. Oxford University 1995.
  • Ozment, Steven E., Flesh and spirit. Private life in early-modern Germany, New York u.a. 1999. [Nürnberg]
  • Roper, Lyndal, Witchcraft and fantasy in early modern Germany, in: History Workshop 32 (1991), 19-43.
  • Safley, Thomas Max, Bankruptcy. Family and finance in early modern Augsburg, in: The Journal of European economic history 29 (2000), 53-75.
  • Safley, Thomas Max, Children of the laboring poor: Expectation and experience among the orphans of early modern Augsburg (Studies in Central European histories 38), Leiden etc. 2007.
  • Safley, Thomas Max, Success and failure. Reflections on the effectiveness of early modern poor relief in the orphanages of Augsburg, in: Ocker, Christopher et al. (eds.), Ratsräson und Bürgersinn. Essays in honor of Thomas A. Brady Jr. (Studies in medieval and reformation traditions 128), Leiden 2007, 283-313.
  • Schindling, Anton, The Development of the Eternal Diet in Regensburg, in: Journal of Modern History 58 (1986), 64-75.
  • Roper, Lyndal, Oedipus and the Devil. Witchcraft, Sexuality and Religion in Early Modern Europe, London etc. 1994.
  • Roper, Lyndal, Witch craze: Terror and Fantasy in Baroque Germany, New Haven etc. 2004.
  • Roper, Lyndal, The Gorgon of Augsburg, in; Ibid. (ed.), The witch in the Western imagination, Charlottesville 2012, 48-71.
  • Slafter, Stewart, The Augsburg shopkeepers’ guild and the circulation of goods in early modern Europe, PhD. Chicago/Ill. 1999.
  • Schremmer, Eckart, Saltmining and the Salt-trade. A State-Monopoly in the XVIth–XVIIth Centuries. A Case-Study in Public Enterprise and Development in Austria and the South German States, in: Journal of European Economic History 8 (1979), 291-312.
  • Smith, Jeffrey, Imaging and imagining Nuremberg, in: Grood, Arthur et al. (ed.), Topographies of the Early Modern City (Transatlantische Studien zu Mittelalter und Früher Neuzeit 3), Göttingen 2008, 17-41.
  • Spoerer, Mark, The revenue structures of Brandenburg-Prussia, Saxony and Bavaria (fifteenth to nineteenth centuries): are they compatible with the Bonney-Ormrod model? in: Cavaciocchi, Simonetta (ed.), La Fiscalità nell’economia europea secc. XIII-XVIII – Fiscal Systems in the European Economy from the 13th to the 18th Centuries. Ed. (Atti delle Settimane di Studi e altri Convegni 39), Firenze 2008, 781-791.
  • Sreenivasan, Govind Paul, The peasants of Ottobeuren 1487-1726. A rural society in early modern Europe, Cambridge u.a. 2004.
  • Stein, Claudia, The meaning of signs: Diagnosing the French pox in early modern Augsburg, in: Bulletin of the history of medicine 80 (2006), 617-648.
  • Stein, Claudia, Negotiating the French pox in early modern Germany, Aldershot etc. 2008. [Augsburg]
  • Strasser, Ulrike, State of virginity: Gender, religion, and politics in an early modern Catholic state (Social history, popular culture, and politics in Germany), Ann Arbor 2007.
  • Thomas, Andrew J., A House Divided: Wittelsbach Confessional Court Cultures in the Holy Roman Empire, c. 1550-1650 (Studies in medieval and reformation traditions 150), Leiden u.a. 2010.
  • Tlusty, B. Ann, The devil’s altar: The tavern and society in early modern Augsburg, PhD. University of Maryland 1994.
  • Tlusty, B. Ann, Water of Life, Water of Death: The Controversy over Brandy and Gin in Early Modern Augsburg, in: Central European History 31 (1998), 1-30.
  • Tlusty, B. Ann, Bacchus and civic order: The culture of drink in early modern Germany (Studies in early modern German history), Charlottesville etc. 2001.
  • Tlusty, B. Ann, Violence and urban identity in early modern Augsburg: communication strategies between authorities and citizens in the adjudication of fights, in: Van Horn Melton, James (ed.), Cultures of communication from Reformation to Enlightenment. Constructing Publics in the early modern German Lands, Aldershot 2002, 10-23.
  • Tlusty, B. Ann, The martial ethic in early modern Germany: civic duty and the right of arms, Basingstoke etc. 2011. [Augsburg, Nördlingen]
  • Tlusty, B. Ann, Full cups, full coffers: tax strategies and consumer culture in the early modern german cities, in: German History 32 (2014), 1-28.
  • Tlusty, B. Ann, Jonas Losch and the Augsburg’s Artisan Singers, in: Zeitschrift des Historischen Vereins für Schwaben 109 (2017), 29-53.
  • Tyler, Jeffery J., Lord of the sacred city. The Episcopus Exclusus in late medieval and early modern Germany (Studies in medieval and Reformation thought 72), Leiden etc. 1999 [Augsburg]
  • Tyler, Jeffery J., Lordship, Expulsion, and Survival: The Episcopus exclusus in Late Medieval and Early Modern Augsburg and Konstanz, in: Zeitschrift des Historischen Vereins für Schwaben 92 (1999), 31-53.
  • Tyler, Jeffery J., Refugees and reform: Banishment and exile in early modern Augsburg, in: Bast, Robert B. et al. (eds.), Continuity and change: The harvest of late medieval and reformation history. Essays presented to Heiko A. Oberman on his 70th birthday, Leiden etc. 2000, 77-97.
  • Ullmann, Sabine, Poor jewish families in early modern rural Swabia, in: Fontaine, Laurence et al. (eds.), Household strategies for survival 1600-2000. Fission, faction and cooperation (International Review of Social History, Supplement 8), Cambridge etc. 2000, 93-113.
  • Walinski-Kiehl, Robert, The devil’s children: Child witch-trials in early modern Germany, in: Continuity and change 11 (1996), 171-189.
  • Walisnki-Kiehl, Robert, “Godly states”, confessional conflict and witch-hunting in early modern Germany, in: Levack, Brian P (ed.), New perspectives on Witchcraft, Magic, and Demonology. Vol. 2: Witchcraft in Europe, New York etc. 2001, 483-494.
  • Wilson, Peter H., The Immerwährende Reichstag in English and American Historiography, in: Rudolph, Harriet – von Schlachta, Astrid (eds.), Reichsstadt – Reich – Europa. Neue Perspektiven auf den Immerwährenden Reichstag zu Regensburg (1663-1806), Regensburg 2015, 105-122.
  • Winiwarter, Verena – Haidvogl, Gertrud – Bürkner, Michael, The rise and fall of Munich’s early modern water network. A tale of prowess and power, in: Water History 8 (2016), 277-299.
  • Zmora, Hillay, The formation of the imperial knighthood in Franconia: a comparative European perspective, in: Evans, Richard J. – Schaich, Michael – Wilson, Peter W. (ed.), The Holy Roman Empire (Studies of the German Historical Institute London), Oxford etc. 2011, 283-302.
  • Zmora, Hillay, The feud in Early Modern Germany, Cambridge etc. 2011. [Franconia]
  •  

16th Century: Renaissance and Reformation

  • Albu, Emily, The Medieval Peutinger Map: Imperial Roman Revival in a German Empire, New York 2014.
  • Beer, Mathias, Private correspondence in Germany in the Reformation Era: A forgotten source for the history of the burgher family, in: The Sixteenth Century Journal 32 (2001), 931-951. [Linhart Tucher]
  • Boner, Patrick J., Statesman and Scholar: Herwarth von Hohenburg as Patron and Author in the Republic of Letters, in: History of Science 52 (2014), 29-51.
  • Broadhead, Philip, Internal Politics and Civic Society in Augsburg during the era of the Early Reformation, 1518-37, PhD. Canterbury 1981.
  • Broadhead, Philip, Self-Interest and Security: Relations between Nuremberg and its Territory in the Early Sixteenth Century, in: German History 11 (1993), 1-19.
  • Broadhead, Philip, Guildsmen, religious reform and the search for the common good: the role of the guilds in the early reformation in Augsburg, in: The historical journal 39 (1996), 577-597.
  • Broadhead, Philip, “One heart and one soul”: the changing nature of public worship in Augsburg, 1521-1548, in: Swanson, Robert N. (ed.), Continuity and change in Christian worship, Woodbridge 1999, 116-127.
  • Broadhead, Philip, Public Worship, Liturgy and the Introduction of the Lutheran Reformation in the Territorial Lands of Nuremberg, in: English Historical Review 120 (2005), 277-302.
  • Burnett, Stephen G., Distorted Mirrors: Antonius Margaritha, Johann Buxtorf and Christian Ethnographies of the Jews, in: Sixteenth Century Journal 25 (1994), 275-287.
  • Buskirk, Jessica E., Portraiture and Arithmetic in sixteenth-century Bavaria: Deciphering Barthel Beham’s Calculator, in: Renaissance Quarterly 66 (2013), 35-80.
  • Bushart, Bruno, Venice and Augsburg. Architecture and sculpture in the Sixteenth Century, in: Aikema, Bernard – Brown, Beverly Louise (eds.), Renaissance Venice and the North: Crosscurrents in the time of Bellini, Dürer, and Titian, New York 2000, 160-171.
  • Clasen, Claus-Peter, Anabaptism. A social history, 1525-1618: Switzerland, Austria, Moravia, South and Central Germany, Ithaca 1972.
  • Classen, Albrecht, Woman poet and reformer: The 16th-century feminist Argula von Grumbach, in: Daphnis 20 (1991), 167-197.
  • Close, Christopher W., The Mindelaltheim affair: High justice, ius reformandi, and the rural reformation in Eastern Swabia (1542-46), in: The Sixteenth Century Journal 38 (2007), 371-392.
  • Close, Christopher W., Augsburg, Zurich, and the Transfer of Preachers during the Schmalkaldic War, in: Central European History 42 (2009), 595-619.
  • Close, Christopher W., The Urban Reformation in Donauwörth, in: Ibid. (ed.), The negotiated Reformation. Imperial cities and the politics of urban reform, 1525-1550, Cambridge etc. 2009, 110-143.
  • Close, Christopher W., The Urban Reformation in Kaufbeuren, in: Ibid. (ed.), The negotiated Reformation. Imperial cities and the politics of urban reform, 1525-1550, Cambridge etc. 2009, 144-178.
  • Close, Christopher W., Estate solidarity and empire: Charlres V’s failed attempt to revive the Swabian League, in: Archiv für Reformationsgeschichte 104 (2013), 134-157.
  • Close, Christopher W., Urban Magistrates, Regional Reform, and the Politics of Alliance in The Low Countries and Southern Germany after the Peace of Augsburg, in: Dingel, Irene – Lotz-Heumann, Ute (eds.), Entfaltung und zeitgenössische Wirkung der Reformation im europäischen Kontext (Schriften des Vereins für Reformationsgeschichte 216), Gütersloh 2015, 154-172.
  • Creasman, Allyson F., The Virgin Mary against the Jews: Anti-jewish polemic in the pilgrimage to the Schöne Maria of Regensburg 1519–25, in: The Sixteenth Century Journal 33 (2002), 963-980.
  • Creasman, Allyson F., Censorship and civic order in Reformation Germany, 1517-1648: ‘Printed poison & evil talk’, Farnham etc. 2012.
  • Cuneo, Pia F., Art and power in Augsburg: the art production of Jörg Breu the Elder (ca. 1475-1536), PhD. Nortwestern University 1991.
  • Cuneo, Pia F., Propriety, property, and politics: Jörg Breu the elder and issues of iconoclasm in reformation Augsburg, in: German History 14 (1996), 1-20.
  • Cuneo, Pia F., Art and politics in early modern Germany: Jörg Breu the Elder and the fashioning of political identity, ca. 1475 – 1536 (Studies in medieval and Reformation thought 67), Leiden 1998.
  • Cuneo, Pia F., Jörg Breu the Elder’s “Death of Lucretia”: history, sexuality, and the state, in: Caroll, Jane L. – Stewart, Alison G. (ed.), Saints, sinners, and sisters: Gender and northern art in medieval and early modern Europe, Burlington 2010, 26-43.
  • Diemling, Maria, Anthonius Margaritha and his „Der Gantz Judisch Glaub”, in: Bell, Dean Phillip – Burnett, Stephen G. (eds.), Jews, Judaism and the Reformation in Sixteenth-Century Germany (Studies in Central European Histories), Boston / Leiden 2006, 303–333.
  • Dixon, C. Scott, The reformation and parish morality in Brandenburg-Ansbach-Kulmbach, in: Archiv für Reformationsgeschichte 87 (1996), 255-286.
  • Dixon, C. Scott, Popular beliefs and the Reformation in Brandenburg-Ansbach, in: Scribner, Bob et al. (ed.), Popular religion in Germany and Central Europe 1400-1800, Basingstoke etc. 1996, 119-139.
  • Dixon, C. Scott, The German Reformation and the territorial city: Reform initiatives in Schwabach, 1523-1527, in: German History 14 (1996), 123-140.
  • Dixon, C. Scott, The Reformation and Rural Society: The Parishes of Brandenburg-Ansbach-Kulmbach, 1528-1603 (Cambridge studies in early modern history), Cambridge etc. 2002.
  • Dixon, C. Scott, Urban order and religious coexistence in the German imperial city: Augsburg and Donauwörth, 1548-1608, in: Central European History 40 (2007), 1-33.
  • Dixon, C. Scott, The Imperial Cities and the Politics of Reformation, in: Evans, Richard J. – Schaich, Michael – Wilson, Peter H. (eds.), The Holy Roman Empire 1495-1806, Oxford 2011, 139-164.
  • Dueck, Abe J., Religion and Temporal Authority in the Reformation: The Controversy among the Protestants Prior to the Peace of Nuremberg, 1532, in: The Sixteenth Century Journal 13 (1982), 55-74.
  • Dunwoody, Sean F., Civic peace as a spatial practice. Calming confessional tensions in Augsburg, 1547-1600, in: Stock, Markus – Vöhringer, Nicola (eds.), Spatial practices medieval / modern (Transatlantische Studien zu Mittelalter und Früher Neuzeit 6), Göttingen 2014, 207-240.
  • Eberhardt Bate, Heidi, Portrait and Pageantry: New Idioms in the Interaction between City and Empire in Sixteenth-Century Nuremberg, in: Ocker, Christopher et al. (eds.), Politics and Reformations. Communities, Polities, Nations, and Empires. Essays in Honor of Thomas A. Brady, Jr., Leiden / Boston 2007, 121-142.
  • Eichberger, Dagmar – Zika, Charles (ed.), Dürer and his culture, Cambridge etc. 2005.
  • Fisher, Gary, The Munich Kapelle of Orlando di Lasso 1563-1594. A Model for Renaissance Choral Performance Practice, Diss. Oklahoma University 1987.
  • Gates, Jann W., The formulation of city council policy and the introduction of the protestant reformation in Nuremberg 1524-1525, PhD. Columbus/Ohio 1975.
  • Graser, Helmut – Tlusty, B. Ann, Layers of literacy in a sixteenth-century case of fraud, in: Plummer, Majorie Elizabeth – Midelforth, H.C. Erik (ed.), Ideas and cultural margins in early modern Germany, Burlington 2009, 31-47.
  • Häberlein, Mark, The Fuggers of Augsburg: Pursuing Wealth and Honor in Renaissance Germany (Studies in early modern German history), Charlottesville 2012.
  • Häberlein, Mark, Merchant’s bankruptcies, economic development and social relations in German cities during the long 16th century, in: Safley, Thomas Max (ed.), The history of bankruptcy. Economic, social and cultural implications in early modern Europe, London etc. 2013, 17-33.
  • Häberlein, Mark, Atlantic sugar and Southern German merchant capital in the sixteenth century, in: Lachenicht, Susanne (ed.), Europeans engaging the Atlantic: Knowledge and Trade 1500 – 1800, Frankfurt am Main etc. 2014, 47-71.
  • Hammond, Mitchell, From pilgrims to patients: Care for the sick in sixteenth-century Augsburg, in: Gilomen, Hans Jörg et al. (eds.), Von der Barmherzigkeit zur Sozialversicherung (Schweizerische Gesellschaft für Wirtschafts- und Sozialgeschichte 18), Zürich 2001, 59-71.
  • Hanß, Stefan, Timing the Self in Sixteenth-Century Augsburg: Veit Konrad Schwarz (1541–1561), in: German History 35 (2017), 495-524.
  • Harrington, Joel F., The faithful executioner: life and death, honor and shame in the turbulent sixteenth century, New York 2013. [Nürnberg]
  • Herre, Franz, The life and times of the Fuggers, Augsburg 2009.
  • Johnson, Christine R., The image of America in sixteenth-century Augsburg, in: Gassert, Philipp (ed.), Augsburg und Amerika. Aneignungen und globale Verflechtungen in einer Stadt (Documenta Augustana 24), Augsburg 2013, 39-56.
  • Kaltwasser, Franz Georg, The common roots of library and museum in the sixteenth century: the example of Munich, in: Library History 20 (2004), 163-181.
  • Katritzky, M. A., How did the Commedia dell’arte cross the Alps to Bavaria? in: Theatre Research International 16 (1991), 201-215.
  • Kinser, Samuel, Presentation and Representation: Carnival at Nuremberg, 1450-1550, in: Representations 13 (1986), 1-33.
  • Kinzelbach, Annemarie, Hospitals, medicine, and society: Southern German imperial towns in the sixteenth century, in: Renaissance Studies 15 (2001), 217-228.
  • Kirwan, Richard, The Conversion of Jacob Reihing: Academic Controversy and the Professorial Ideal in Confessional Germany, in: German History 36 (2018), 1-20.
  • Künast, Hans Jörg, Augsburg’s Role in the German Book Trade in the First Half of the Sixteenth Century, in: Walsby, Malcom (ed.), The book triumphant: Print in transition in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries, Leiden etc. 2011, 320-333.
  • Kuhn, Christian, Urban laughter as a “counter-public” sphere in Augsburg: The case of the city mayor, Jakob Herbrot (1490/95-1564), in: International review of social history 52 (2007), 77-93.
  • Kuhn, Christian, Generational discourse and images of urban youth in private letters: The Nuremberg Tucher family around 1550, in: Cochelin, Isabelle et al. (ed.), Medieval life cycles (International medieval research 18), Turnhout 2013, 211-238.
  • Limouze, Dorothy, From Bavaria to the Veneto, and return: the Sadelers, Jacopo Bassano, and Italian art in Munich, in: Bukovinská, Beket – Konečný, Lubomír (eds.), München-Prag um 1600 (Studia Rudolphina, Sonderheft), Praha 2009, 117-124.
  • Matheson, Peter, Breaking the silence: Women, Censorship, and the Reformation, in: Sixteenth Century Journal 27 (1996), 97-109 [Argula von Grumbach]
  • Mathew, Kuzhippalli Skaria, Indo-Portuguese trade and the Fuggers of Germany: sixteenth century, New Dehli 1997.
  • Maxwell, Susan, A Marriage Commemorated in the Stairway of Fools, in: Sixteenth Century Journal 36 (2005), 717-741.
  • Maxwell, Susan, The Pursuit of Art and Pleasure in the Secret Grotto of Wilhelm V of Bavaria, in: Renaissance Quarterly 61 (2008), 414-463.
  • Maxwell, Susan, The court art of Friedrich Sustris. Patronage in late Renaissance Bavaria, Farnham etc. 2011.
  • Mobley, Susan Spruell, Confessionalizing the Curriculum: The Faculties of Arts and Theology at the Universities of Tübingen and Ingolstadt in the Second Half of the Sixteenth Century, PhD. University of Wisconsin 1998.
  • Morrall, Andrew, Urban Craftsmen and the Courts in Sixteenth-Century Germany, in: Eichberger, Dagmar – Lorentz, Philippe – Tacke, Andreas (ed.), The Artist between Court and City, Petersberg 2017, 220-245. [Augsburg, Nürnberg]
  • Newman, Jane O., Pastoral conventions: Poetry, language, and thought in seventeenth-century Nuremberg, Baltimore etc. 1990.
  • Ninness, Richard J., Confessional conflict and cooperation in early modern Germany: The catholic prince-bishopric of Bamberg and its protestant aristocracy (1555-1619), PhD. Philadelphia 2006.
  • Ninness, Richard J., Imperial knights and confessional cooperation in the prince-bishopric of Bamberg (1555-1648), in: Kaufmann, Thomas et al. (eds.), Frühneuzeitliche Konfessionskulturen (Schriften des Vereins für Reformationsgeschichte 207), Gütersloh 2008, 49-67.
  • Ninness, Richard J., Protestants as agents of the counter-reformation in the Prince-Bishopric of Bamberg, in: The Sixteenth Century Journal 40 (2009), 699-720.
  • Ninness, Richard J., Between opposition and collaboration. Nobles, bishops, and the German reformations in the prince-bishopric of Bamberg, 1555-1619 (Studies in Central European histories 53), Leiden 2011.
  • Pilaski Kaliardos, Katharina, Prodigious relics: Confessional argument and the sacralization of the territory in the Munich Kunstkammer of Albrecht V, in: Archiv für Reformationsgeschichte 102 (2011), 267-295.
  • Pilaski Kaliardos, Katharina, The Munich Kunstkammer: Art, Nature, and the Representation of Knowledge in Courtly Contexts (Spätmittelalter, Humanismus, Reformation 73), Tübingen 2013.
  • Ozment, Steven, The private life of an early modern teenager. A Nuremberg Lutheran visits catholic Louvain (1577), in: Journal of Family History 20 (1996), 22-43.
  • Price, David, Albrecht Dürer’s Renaissance: Humanism, Reformation and the Art of Faith, Ann Arbor 22004.
  • Rice, Edward L, The influence of the reformation on Nuremberg’s provisions for social welfare, 1521-1528, PhD. Ohio State University 1975.
  • Rittgers, Ronald K., Private confession and the Lutheranization of sixteenth-century Nördlingen, in: Sixteenth Century Journal 36 (2005), 1063-1085.
  • Roeck, Bernd, Venice and Germany. Commercial contacts and intellectual inspirations, in: Aikema, Bernard – Brown, Beverly Louise (eds.), Renaissance Venice and the North: Crosscurrents in the time of Bellini, Dürer, and Titian, New York 2000, 44-55.
  • Roper, Lyndal, Discipline and respectability: Prostitution and the reformation in Augsburg, in: History Workshop 19 (1985), 3-28.
  • Roper, Lyndal, Mothers of Debauchery: Procuresses in Reformation Augsburg, in: German History 6 (1988), 1-19.
  • Roper, Lyndal, Will and honour: sex, words and power in Augsburg criminal trials, in: Radical History Review 43 (1989), 45-71.
  • Roper, Lyndal, The holy household. Women and morals in reformation Augsburg (Oxford studies of history), Oxford 1989.
  • Safley, Thomas Max, Matheus Miller’s memoir. A merchant’s life in the seventeenth century (Early modern history: Society and culture), Basingstoke etc. 2000.
  • Safley, Thomas Max, After the fall: The dynamics of social death and rebirth in the wake of the Höchstetter bankruptcy, 1529 to 1586, in: Tatlock, Lynne (ed.), Enduring loss in early modern Germany (Studies in central European histories 50), Leiden etc. 2010, 415-434.
  • Safley, Thomas Max, The Höchstetter bankruptcy of 1529 and its relationship to the European quicksilver market, in: Rössner, Philipp Robinson (eds.), Cities, coins, commerce (Studien zur Gewerbe- und Handelsgeschichte der vorindustriellen Zeit 31), Stuttgart 2012, 149-166.
  • Sargent, Steven D., Saints’ Cults and Naming Patterns in Bavaria, 1400-1600, in: Catholic Historical Review 76 (1990), 673-697.
  • Seebaß, Gottfried, The Importance of the Imperial City of Nuremberg in the Reformation, in: Kirk, James (ed.), Humanism and Reform. The Church in Europe, England, and Scotland, 1400-1643. Essays in honour of James K. Cameron (Studies in Church History, Subsidia 8), 113-127.
  • Silver, Larry (ed.), The essential Dürer, Philadelphia 2010.
  • Smith, Jeffrey, Nuremberg. A Renaissance city, 1500-1618, Austin 1983.
  • Smith, Jeffrey, Netherlandish artists and art in Renaissance Nuremberg, in: Simiolus 20 (1991), 153-167.
  • Smith, Jeffrey, Albrecht Dürer and Eastern Europe, in: Ars 42 (2009), 5-22.
  • Smith, Jeffrey, The 2010 Josephine Waters Bennett lecture: Albrecht Dürer as collector, in: Renaissance Quarterly 61 (2011), 1-49.
  • Smith, William Bradford, Anticlericalism in Bamberg on the eve of the peasants’ war, in: Van Horn Melton, James (ed.), Cultures of communication from Reformation to Enlightenment, Aldershot 2002, 48-65.
  • Smith, William Bradford, Lutheran resistance to the imperial interim in Hesse and Kulmbach, in: Lutheran Quarterly 19 (2005), 249-275.
  • Smith, William Bradford, Friedrich Förner, the Catholic Reformation, and witch-hunting in Bamberg, in: The Sixteenth Century Journal 36 (2005), 115-128.
  • Smith, William Bradford, Reformation and the German territorial state: Upper Franconia, 1300-1630 (Changing perspectives on early modern Europe 8), Rochester etc. 2008.
  • Smoller, Laura A., Playing Cards and Popular Culture in Sixteenth-Century Nuremberg, in: Sixteenth Century Journal 17 (1986), 183-214.
  • Stein, Claudia, Images and meaning-making in a world of resemblance: The Bavarian-Saxon Kidney Stone Affair of 1580, in: European History Quarterly 43 (2013), 205-234.
  • Stewart, Alison G., Taverns in Nuremberg prints at the time of the German reformation, in: Kümin, Beat et al. (ed.), The word of the tavern, Aldershot 2002, 95-115.
  • Stewart, Alison G., The beginning of peasant festival imagery: Sebald Beham and the reform of festivals in Nuremberg, in: Ibid. (ed.), Before Bruegel, Aldershot etc. 2008, 15-57.
  • Stievermann, Dieter, Southern German Courts around 1500, in: Asch, Ronald G. – Birke, Adolf M. (eds.), Princes, Patronage and the Nobility: The Court at the Beginning of the Modern Age c.1450-1650 (Studies of German Historical Institute London), Oxford 1991, 157-172.
  • Strauss, Gerald, Nuremberg in the sixteenth century. City politics and life between Middle Ages and Modern Times, Bloomington 1976.
  • Trüter, Johannes, Johannes Eck (1486-1543). Academic career and self-fashioning, in: Kirwan, Richard (ed.), Scholary Self-Fashioning and Community in the Early Modern University, Farnham etc. 2013, 59-78.
  • Vice, Roy L., The German Peasants’ War of 1525 and its aftermath in Rothenburgob der Tauber and Würzburg, PhD. Chicago 1984.
  • Vice, Roy L., Vineyards, vinedressers, and the peasants’ war in Franconia, in: Archiv für Reformationsgeschichte 79 (1988), 138-157.
  • Vice, Roy L., The leadership and structure of the Tauber Band during the Peasant’s War in Franconia, in: Central European History 21 (1988), 175-195.
  • Vice, Roy L., The Village Clergy near Rothenburg ob der Tauber and the Peasants’ War, in: Archiv für Reformationsgeschichte 82 (1991), 123-146.
  • Vice, Roy L., Ehrenfried Kumpf: Karlstadt’s patron and peasants’ war rebel, in: Archiv für Reformationsgeschichte 86 (1995), 153-174.
  • Vice, Roy L., Iconoclasm in Rothenburg ob der Tauber in 1525, in: Archiv für Reformationsgeschichte 89 (1998), 55-78.
  • Vice, Roy L., The politics of blame in the aftermath of the Peasants’ War in Franconia: Andreas Bodenstein von Karlstadt and Rothenburg ob der Tauber, in: Borchardt, Karl et al. (ed.), Städte, Regionen, Vergangenheiten (Quellen und Forschungen zur Geschichte des Bistums und Hochstifts Würzburg 59), Würzburg 2003, 243-262.
  • Walton, Michael T., Anthonius Margaritha and the Jewish Faith. Jewish Life and Conversion in Sixteenth-Century Germany, Detroit 2012.
  • Wieland, Christian, German aristocracies and social discipline. Noble hierarchies, the state, and the law in sixteenth-century Bavaria, in: Evans, Richard J. – Schaich, Michael – Wilson, Peter W. (ed.), The Holy Roman Empire 1495-1806 (Studies of the German Historical Institute London), Oxford etc. 2011, 263-281.
  • Wilson, Norman J., Implicit Meanings and Self-Representations in Official Correspondence and Accounting: Regensburg, 1467-1561, PhD. Los Angeles 1992.
  • Wolfart, Johannes C., Religion, government and political culture in early modern Germany: Lindau, 1520-1628 (Early modern history: society and culture), Basingstoke 2002.
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  • Zelinsky Hanson, Michele, Religious Identity in an Early Reformation Community: Augsburg, 1517 to 1555, Leiden / Boston 2009.
  • Zika, Charles, Nuremberg. The city and its culture in the early sixteenth century, in: Zdanowicz, Irena (ed.), Albrecht Dürer in the collection of the National Gallery of Victoria (The Robert Raynorpublications in prints and drawings 5), Melbourne 1994, 28-44.
  • Zmora, Hillay, Princely state-making and the “crisis of the aristocracy” in late medieval Germany, in: Past and Present 153 (1996), 37-63.
  • Zmora, Hillay, State and nobility in early modern Germany: the knightly feud in Franconia, 1440-1567 (Cambridge Studies in Early Modern History), Cambridge etc. 1997.
  • Zophy, Jonathan, Patriarchal politics and Christoph Kress 1484-1535 of Nuremberg (Studies in German thought and history 14), Lewiston etc. 1992.

17th and 18th Centuries: Counter-Reformation, Thirty Years’ War, and Absolutism

  • Anderson, Alison D., On the verge of war: International relations and the Jülich-Kleve succession crisis (1609-1614) (Studies in Central European histories), Boston 1999.
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  • Calvi, Giulia, Connected Courts. Violante Beatrice of Bavaria in Florence and Siena, in: Benadusi, Giovanna – Brown, Judith C. (eds.), Medici Women. The Making of a Dynasty in Grand Ducal Tuscany, Toronto 2015, 302-321.
  • Cole, Richard Glenn, What did the Lutheran Reformation look like a hundred years after Martin Luther? Community and culture in Ansbach, Germany in the seventeenth century, Lewiston 2014.
  • Davis, Margaret Daly, Munich in 1663. Notes from a “Bildungsreise” through Germany, in: Augustyn, Wolfgang – Diemer, Peter – Lauterbach, Iris (ed.), Rondo: Beiträge für Peter Diemer zum 65. Geburtstag (Veröffentlichungen des Zentralinstituts für Kunstgeschichte 25), München 2010, 131-144.
  • Dugan, Eileen T., Images of marriage and family life in Nördlingen: Moral preaching and devotional literature 1589-1712, PhD. Ohio State University 1987.
  • Dugan, Eileen T., The Funeral Sermon as a key to familial values in early modern Nördlingen, in: Sixteenth Century Journal 22 (1989), 631-645.
  • Falkner, James, Blenheim 1704, Stroud 2015.
  • Fisher, Alexander J., Music, Piety, and Propaganda. The soundscapes of counter-reformation Bavaria, Oxford u.a. 2014.
  • Friedrichs, Christopher R., Urban Society in an Age of War: Nördlingen 1580-1720, Princeton 1979.
  • Gaeddert, Dale Albert, The Franco-Bavarian alliance during the War of the Spanish Succession, Diss. Ohio State University 1969.
  • Garland, John L., Irish Officers in the Bavarian Service during the War of Spanish Succession, in: Irish Sword: Journal of the Military History Society of Ireland 56 (1981), 240-255.
  • Göttler, Christine, The art of solitude: environments of prayer at the Bavarian court of Wilhelm V, in: Art History 40 (2017), 404-429.
  • Göttler, Christine, ‘Sacred Woods’: Performing Solitude at the Court of Duke Wilhelm V of Bavaria, in: Enenkel, Karl A.E. – ibid. (eds.), Solitudo. Spaces, Places, and Times of Solitude in Late Medieval and Early Modern Cultures, Leiden / Boston 2018, 140-176.
  • Hattendorf, John B., English Grand Strategy and the Blenheim Campaign of 1704, in: International History Review 5 (1983), 3-19.
  • Haude, Sigrun, War – A Fortuitous Occasion for Social Disciplining and Political Centralization? The Case of Bavaria under Maximilian I, in: Mladek, Klaus (ed.), Police forces. A cultural history of an institution, New York 2007, 13-24.
  • Haude, Sigrun, Social control and social justice under Maximilian I of Bavaria (R. 1598-1651), in: Ocker, Christopher (ed.), Politics and reformations. Communities, polities, nations, and empires. Essays in honor of Thomas A. Brady (Studies in medieval and Reformation traditions 128), Leiden 2007, 423-439.
  • Haude, Sigrun, Experiencing the Thirty Years War. Autobiographical writings by members of religious orders in Bavaria, in: Spinks, Jennifer – Zika, Charles (eds.), Disaster, death and the emotions in the shadow of the apocalypse, 1400-1700, London 2016, 135-153.
  • Hsia, Ronnie Po-Chia, Two types of politics. A comparative study of Jesuits at courts in 17th century Bavaria and France, in: Meinhardt, Matthias et al. (eds.), Religion, Macht, Politik. Hofgeistlichkeit im Europa der Frühen Neuzeit (1500-1800) (Wolfenbütteler Forschungen 137), Wiesbaden 2014, 249-266.
  • Jeggle, Christof, Coping with the crisis: Italian merchants in seventeenth-century Nuremberg, in: Bonoldi, Andrea (ed.), Merchants in times of crises (16th to mid-19th century) (Beiträge zur Wirtschafts- und Sozialgeschichte 127), Stuttgart 2015, 51-78.
  • Johnson, Trevor, Defining the confessional frontier: Bavaria, the Upper Palatinate and counter-reformation “Historica Sacra”, in: Ellis, Steven G. et al. (eds.), Frontiers and the writing of history 1500-1850 (The formation of Europe 1), Hannover-Laatzen 2006, 151-166.
  • Johnson, Trevor, Magistrates, Madonnas, and Miracles: The Counter-Reformation in the Upper Palatinate, Farnhamu.a. 2009.
  • Kenworthy-Browne, Christina (ed.), Mary Ward (1585-1645): ‘A Briefe Relation’, with Autobiographical Fragments and a Selection of Letters (Catholic Record Society publications / Records series 81), Woobridge 2008.
  • Leuschner, Eckhard, Propagating St. Michael in Munich: The new Jesuit church and its early representations in the light of international visual communications, in: Oy-Marra, Elisabeth – Remmert, Volker R. (eds.), Le monde est une peinture. Jesuitische Identität und die Rolle der Bilder (Beiträge zu den Historischen Kulturwissenschaften 7), Berlin 2011, 177-202.
  • Mason, Hugh J., „Salmonella Typhi” and the Crown of Spain, in: Canadian Bulletin of Medical History 7 (1990), 31-52.
  • Miller, James, “nothing else than fire and smoke”: Bavaria, 1632, in: Ibid. (ed.), Swords for hire. The Scottish Mercenary, Edinburgh 2007, 169-185.
  • Newman, Jane O., Institutions in the pastoral: The Nuremberg Pegnesischer Blumenorden (1644), PhD. Princeton 1983.
  • Newman, Jane O., Pastoral Conventions. Poetry, Language and Thought in seventeenth-century Nuremberg, Baltimore etc. 1990.
  • Noreen, Kirstin, Replicating the Icon of Santa Maria Maggiore: The Mater ter admirabilis and the Jesuits of Ingolstadt, in: Visual Resources: An International Journal of Documentation 24 (2008), 19-37.
  • Oba, Haruka, Using the Past for the Church’s “Present” and “Future”. The remembrance of catholic Japan in drama and art in the southern German-speaking area, in: Schmale, Wolfgang – Romberg, Marion – Köstlbauer, Josef (ed.), The language of continent allegories in Baroque Central Europe, Stuttgart 2016, 71-85.
  • Over, Berthold, From Munich to ‘Foreign’ Lands and Back Again.: Relocation of the Munich Court and Migration of Musicians (c. 1690-1715), in: zur Nieden, Gesa – Ibid. (eds.), Musicians’ mobilities and music migrations in early modern Europe, Bielefeld 2016, 91-134.
  • Paas, John Roger, From Respected Guest to persona non grata: The engraver and Broadsheet Publisher Peter Isselburg in Nuremberg, 1612 to 1622, in: German Life and Letters 48 (1995), 292-310.
  • Paas, John Roger, Joachim von Sandrart as Entrepreneur. The Months as print series with verses, in: Ebert-Schifferer, Sybille – Mazzetti di Pietralata, Cecilia (eds.), Joachim von Sandrart: ein europäischer Künstler und Theoretiker zwischen Italien und Deutschland. Akten des internationalen Studientages der Bibliotheca Hertziana, Rom, 3.-4. April 2006 (Römische Studien der Bibliotheca Hertziana 25), München 2009, 123-131.
  • Paas, John Roger, The changing landscape of the competitive Nuremberg print trade: The rise and fall of Paulus Fürst (1608-1666), in: Kirwan, Richard et al. (eds.), Specialist markets in the early modern book world (Library of the written word 40), Leiden etc. 2015, 35-68.
  • Place, Richard, Bavaria and the Collapse of Louis XIV´s German Policy, 1687-1688, in: Journal of Modern History 49 (1977), 369-393.
  • Pursell, Brennan C., The Winter King. Frederick V of the Palatinate and the coming of the Thirty Years’ War, Aldershot 2003.
  • Reifsnyder, Kristen L., Encountering the enemy: Two women’s personal narratives from Seventeenth-Century Germany, in: Daphnis 33 (2004), 267-284. [Klara Staiger]
  • Rowlands, Alison, ‘In Great Secrecy’. The Crime of Infanticide in Rothenburg ob der Tauber, 1501–1618, in: German History 15 (1997), 179-199.
  • Rowlands, Alison, Witchcraft narratives in Germany: Rothenburg, 1561-1652, Manchester 2003.
  • Safley, Thomas Max, Production, transaction, and proletarianization. The textile industry in upper Swabia, 1580–1660, in: Ibid. et al. (eds.), The workplace before the Factory. Artisans and Proletarians 1500 – 1800, Ithaca etc. 1993, 118-145.
  • Smith, Jeffrey, The Jesuit Church of St. Michaels in Munich: The story of an angel with a mission, in: Reinhart, Max (ed.), Infinite Boundaries. Order, disorder, and reorder in early modern German culture (Early Modern German Studies 1), Kirksville 1998, 147-170.
  • Smith, Jeffrey, The art of salvation in Bavaria, in: O’Malley, John et al. (ed.), The Jesuits. Cultures, Sciences, and the Arts, Toronto 2000, 568-599.
  • Smith, Jeffrey (ed.), Sensous Worship. Jesuits and the Art of Early Catholic Reformation in Germany, Princeton etc. 2002. [several Bavarian churches]
  • Smith, Jeffrey, A tale of two cities: Nuremberg and Munich, in: Cohen, Gary B. – Szabo, Franz A. (ed.), Embodiments of Power. Building Baroque Cities in Europe, New York/Oxford 2008, 164-190.
  • Smith, Jeffrey, Rebuilding faith through art. Christoph Schwarz`s “Mary Altarpiece” for the Jesuit College in Munich, in: Hall, Marcia B. – Cooper, Tracy Elizabeth (ed.), The sensuous in the Counter-Reformation Church, New York 2013, 230-251.
  • Soergel, Philip M., Spiritual Medicine for Heretical Poison: The Propagandistic Uses of Legends in Counter-Reformation Bavaria, in: Historical Reflections 17 (1991), 125-149.
  • Soergel, Philip M., Wondrous in his Saints. Counter-Reformation Propaganda in Bavaria, Berkeley 1993.
  • Spring, Laurence, The Bavarian Army during the Thirty Years War, 1618-1648. The backbone of the Catholic League, Solihull 2017.
  • Strasser, Ulrike, Aut murus aut maritus? Women’s lives in counter-reformation Munich (1571-1651), PhD. University of Minnesota 1997.
  • Strasser, Ulrike, Bones of contention: Cloistered nuns, decorated relics, and the contest over women’s place in the public sphere of counter-reformation Munich, in: Archiv für Reformationsgeschichte 90 (1999), 255-288.
  • Strasser, Ulrike, Cloistering women´s past: conflicting accounts of enclosure in a seventeenth-century Munich nunnery, in: Rublack, Ulrike (ed.), Gender in Early Modern History, Cambridge 2002, 221-246.
  • Vignau-Wilberg, Thea, In Europa zu Hause – Niederländer in München um 1600 = Citizens of Europe: Dutch and Flemish Artists in Munich c. 1600, München 2005.
  • Walinski-Kiehl, Robert, Prosecuting witches in early modern Germany, with special reference to the bishopric of Bamberg: 1595-1680, Master Thesis Portsmouth 1981.
  • Walinski-Kiehl, Robert, The devil’s children. Child witch-trials in early modern Germany, in: Levack, Brian P., New perspectives on witchcraft, magic, and demonology, Volume 2, New York etc. 2001, 413-431.
  • Walinski-Kiehl, Robert, “Godly states”, confessional conflict and witch-hunting in early modern Germany, in: Levack, Brian P., New perspectives on witchcraft, magic, and demonology, Volume 2, New York etc. 2001, 483-494.
  • Walinski-Kiehl, Robert, Witch-hunting and state-building in the bishoprics of Bamberg and Würzburg: c. 1570-1630, Dillinger, Johannes etc. (ed.), Hexenprozess und Staatsbildung (Hexenforschung 12), Bielefeld 2008, 245-264.
  • Wallace, David, Holy Amazon: Mary Ward of Yorkshire, 1585-1645, in: Ibid., Strong Women. Life, text, and territory 1347-1645, Oxford 2011, 133-200.
  • Wolfart, Johannes C., Why was private confession so contentious in early seventeenth-century Lindau? In: Scribner, Bob et al. (ed.), Popular Religion in Germany and Central Europe 1400-1800, Basingstoke etc. 1996, 140-165.
  •  

18th Century: Age of Enlightenment

  • Baten, Jorg, Climate, Grain Production and Nutritional Status in Southern Germany during the XVIIIth Century, in: Journal of European Economic History 30 (2001), 9-47.
  • Bernard, Paul P., Joseph II and Bavaria. Two Eighteenth Century Attempts at German Unification, The Hague 1965.
  • Black, Jeremy, Britain and the Wittelsbachs in the Early Eighteenth Century, in: Mitteilungen des Österreichischen Staatsarchivs 40 (1987), 92-127.
  • Black, Jeremy, The Problems of the Small State: Bavaria and Britain in the Second Quarter of the Eighteenth Century, in: European History Quarterly 19 (1989), 5-36.
  • Broline, Duane M. – Selig, Robert, Emigration and the “safety-valve” theory in the eighteenth century: Some mathematical evidence from the Prince-Bishopric of Würzburg, in: Yearbook of German-American Studies 31 (1996), 137-155.
  • Corpis, Duane J., Marian pilgrimage and the performance of male privilege in eighteenth-century Augsburg, in: Central European History 45 (2012), 375-406.
  • Doney, John Christopher, The Catholic Enlightenment and Popular Education in the Prince-Bishopric of Würzburg 1765-95, in; Central European History 21 (1988), 3-30.
  • Doney, John Christopher, Reform and the enlightened Catholic state. Culture and education in the Prince-Bishopric of Wuerzburg, 1731-1795, PhD. Atlanta 1989.
  • Garberson, Eric, Eighteenth-century monastic libraries in southern Germany and Austria. Architecture and decorations (Saecula spiritalia 37), Baden-Baden 1998.
  • Harries, Karsten, The Bavarian Rococo Church: Between faith and aestheticism, New Haven etc. 1983.
  • Hertel, Christiane, Pygmalion in Bavaria. The sculptor Ignaz Günther and eighteenth-century aesthetic art theory, University of Pennsylvania 2011.
  • Hofmeister-Hunger, Andrea, Provincial political culture in the Holy Roman Empire. The Franconian Margravates of Ansbach and Bayreuth, in: Hellmuth, Eckhard (ed.), The transformation of Political Culture. England and Germany in the Late Eighteenth Century (Studies of the German Historical Institute London), Oxford etc. 1990, 149-164.
  • Hsia, Ronnie Po-Chia, Noble patronage and Jesuit missions. Maria Theresia von Fugger-Wellenburg (1690-1762) and Jesuit missionaries in China and Vietnam (Societas Jesu: Monumenta historica Societatis Jesu – Series nova 2), Rom 2006.
  • Johnson, Trevor, Blood, Tears and Xavier-water. Jesuit missionaries and popular religion in the eighteenth-century Upper Palatinate, in: Scribner, Bob et al. (eds.), Popular religion in Germany and Central Europe 1400-1800, Basingstoke etc. 1996, 183-202.
  • Johnson, Trevor, “Trionfi” of the Holy Dead. The Relic Festivals of Baroque Bavaria, in: Friedrich, Karin (ed.), Festive Culture in Germany and Europe from the Sixteenth to the Twentieth Century, Lewiston etc. 2000, 31-56.
  • Kramer, Ferdinand, Bavaria and “Staatsintegration”, in: Ingrao, Charles W. (ed.), Imperial Principalities on the Eve of Revolution: The Lay Electorates (German History, Special Issue), London 2002, 354-372.
  • Kramer, Ferdinand, Bavaria: Reform and Staatsintegration, in: German History 20 (2002), 354-372.
  • Kramer, Ferdinand, Piety at Court: The Wittelsbach Electors in Eighteenth-Century Bavaria, in: Schaich, Michael (ed.), Monarchy and Religion. The transformation of Royal Culture in Eighteenth-Century Europe, Oxford etc. 2007, 283-308.
  • Lepovitz, Helena Waddy, The Industrialization of Popular Art in Bavaria, in: Past & Present 99 (1983), 88-122 [Glass Painting]
  • Maerker, Anna, Political Order and the Ambivalence of Expertise: Count Rumford and Welfare Reform in Late Eighteenth-Century Munich, in: Osiris 25 (2010), 213-230.
  • Melanson, Terry, Perfectibilists: The 18th century Bavarian Order of the Illuminati, Walterville 2009.
  • Redlich, Fritz, Science and Charity: Count Rumford and his followers, in: International Review of Social History 16 (1971), 184-216.
  • Schindler, Norbert, Dog Wars and Human Rights: Perceptions of Political Despotism at the End of the Ancien Régime, in: German History 24 (2006), 1-38.
  • Schlögl, Daniel, Cartography in the Service of Reform Policy in Late Absolutist Bavaria, c.1750-1777, in: Imago Mundi 49 (1997), 116-128.
  • Selig, Robert, The price of freedom: Poverty, emigration and taxation in the Prince-Bishopric of Würzburg in the eighteenth century, in: Yearbook of German-American Studies 26 (1991), 105-126.
  • Sokolow, Jayme A., Count Rumford and the Late Enlightenment Science, Technology and Reform, in: Eighteenth Century: Theory & Interpretation 21 (1980), 67-86.
  • Szczepaniak-Kroll, Agnieszka, The problem of emigration from Bamberg to Poland, Russia, and Hungary in the 18th century, in: Ethnologia Polona 23 (2002), 85-109.
  • Thomas, Marvin E., Karl Theodor and the Bavarian succession 1777-1778, Lewiston 1989.
  • Thomas, Marvin E., The Saxon aspect of the Bavarian Allodial Succession 1777-1779. The history of a legal dispute, Lewiston 2015.
  • Wijaczka, Jacek – Kreczmar, Agnieszka, Franconia as seen by Prince Stanislaw Poniatowski in 1784, in: Acta Poloniae Historica 90 (2004), 77-96.
  • Wolfart, Philip Daniel, The Bishop’s Peasants and the Lands below the Grünten: The Origins of Territoriality in the Late Eighteenth Century, PhD. Queens University 1997.
  • Yonan, Michael, The Wieskirche: Movement, Perception, and Salvation in the Bavarian Rococo, in: Studies in Eighteenth Century Culture 41 (2012), 1-25.

1806–1871: The Kingdom of Bavaria: Napoleon and the German Confederation

  • Baten, Jörg – Murray, John E., Women’s stature and marriage markets in preindustrial Bavaria, in: Journal of Family History 23 (1998), 124-135.
  • Baten, Jörg – Murray, John E., Heights of men and women in 19th-century Bavaria: Economic, nutritional, and disease influences, in: Explorations in Economic History 37 (2000), 351-367.
  • Baumann, Reinhard, The Walhalla: Bavarian integration monument, Germanic hall of fame, expression of European patronage, in: Beller, Manfred – Leersen, Joep (ed.), The Rhine. National Tensions, Romantic Visions, Leiden 2017, 168-181.
  • Bendix, Regina, Moral Integrity in Costumed Identity: Negotiating “National Costume” in 19th-Century Bavaria, in: The Journal of American Folklore 111 (1998), 133-145.
  • Bernsee, Robert, Privatisation and Corruption in Historical Perspective: The Case of Secularisation in Bavaria and Prussia in the Early Nineteenth Century, in: Business History 60 (2018), 321-342.
  • Bidwell, James K., In the Service of the State: The Bavarian ‘Volksschul’ and Nation-Building, 1800-1871, PhD. Boston 2002.
  • Carpenter, Kim Newak, “Sechs Kreuzer sind genug für ein Bier!” The Munich Beer Riot 1844: Social Protest and Public Disorder in mid 19th century Bavaria, PhD. Washington DC 1998.
  • Collins, Mary, Sisters Professing Sisters: Retrieving a Lost Tradition, in: American Benedictine Review 47 (1996), 284-309. [Saint Walburga Eichstätt]
  • Conklin, Robert D., Politics and politicians in Baden and Bavaria, 1815-1848, PhD. Kent State University 1972.
  • Coumbe, Arthur T., The reputation of an Army: Foreign opinion of the Bavarian army in the Franco-German war. An ill. case study, PhD. Duke University 1985.
  • Cronenberg, Allen T. – Gray, Marion W. Jr., Montgelas and the Reorganization of Napoleonic Bavaria, in: Consortium on Revolutionary Europe 1750-1850: Proceedings 20 (1990), 712-719.
  • Davis, John R., The Bamberg Conference of 1854. A Re-Evaluation, in: European History Quarterly 28 (1998), 81-107.
  • Davis, John R., The Coburg connection: Dynastic relations and the House of Coburg in Britain, in: Urbach, Karina (ed.), Royal kinship Anglo-German family networks (Prinz-Albert-Forschungen4), München 2008, 97-115.
  • Davis, John R., Liberalisation, the parliamentary system, and the Crown. The role of the Coburg dynasties in nineteenth-century constitutional debate, in: Kroll, Frank-Lothar – Munke, Martin (eds.), Hannover – Coburg-Gotha – Windsor. Probleme und Perspektiven einer vergleichenden deutsch-britischen Dynastiegeschichte vom 18. bis in das 20. Jahrhundert, Berlin 2015, 259-274.
  • Donakowski, Conrad L. – Rock, Kenneth W., Enlightenment to Romanticism in Bavaria: Johann Michael Sailer and the Wunderhorn Circle, in: Consortium on Revolutionary Europe 1750-1850: Selected Papers, Tallahassee 1994, 123-133.
  • Embree, Michael, Too little, too late: the campaign in West and South Germany, June – July 1866, Solihull 2015.
  • Ermischer, Gerhard, Early industrialisation in a typical German upland Region, in: Belfort, Paul et al. (ed.), Footprints of Industry. Papers from the 300th anniversary conference at Coalbrookdale (British archaeological reports / British series 523), Oxford 2010, 27-42. [Spessart]
  • Eyck, F. Gunther, Loyal Rebels.Andreas Hofer and the Tyrolean Uprising of 1809, Lanham 1986.
  • Fink, Erwin, For Country, Court and Church: The Bavarian Patriots’ Party and Bavarian Regional Identity in the Era of German Unification, in: Speirs, Ronald – Breuilly, John (ed.), Germany’s two Unifications. Anticipations, Experiences, Responses (New perspectives in German Studies), Basingstoke 2005, 155-171.
  • Fodor, Stefan, What Kind of Nation? Political Associations in Bavaria during the Revolution of 1848-1849, PhD. San Diego 1992.
  • Frisch, Lutz – Schiffmann, Dieter, The Hambach Festival 1832. Cradle of German Democracy, Regensburg 2014.
  • Gottfried, Paul Edward, Catholic Romanticism in Munich 1826-1834, Diss. Yale University 1968.
  • Gottfried, Paul Edward, Conservative Millenarians: The Romantic Experience in Bavaria, New York 1979.
  • Hagen, Joshua, Architecture, urban planning, and political authority in Ludwig I’s Munich, in: Journal of Urban History 35 (2009), 459-485.
  • Hagen, Joshua, Shaping public opinion through architecture and urban design: Perspectives on Ludwig I and his building program for a “new Munich”, in: Central European History 48 (2015), 4-30.
  • Harford, Lee S., The Bavarian Army under Napoleon 1805-1813, PhD. Florida State University 1988.
  • Harford, Lee S. Jr. – Holtman, Robert B., Carl Philip von Wrede: Bavarian General of the French Empire, in: Consortium on Revolutionary Europe 1750-1850: Proceedings 19 (1989), 659-674.
  • Harries-Schumann, Lisa, Between Orthodoxy and Reform, Revolution and Reaction: The Jewish Community in Ichenhausen, 1813-1861, in: Leo Baeck Institute Year Book 42 (1997), 29-48.
  • Harris, James F., Bavarians and Jews in conflict in 1866: Neighbours and enemies, in: Yearbook of the Leo Baeck Institute 32 (1987), 103-117.
  • Harris, James F., Public Opinion and the Proposed Emanciaption of the Jews in Bavaria 1849-1850, in: Leo Baeck Institute Year Book 34 (1989), 67-79.
  • Harris, James F., Arms and the people: The Bürgerwehr of Lower Franconia in 1848 and 1849, in: Jarausch, Konrad (ed.), In search of a liberal Germany. Studies in the history of German liberalism from 1789 to the present, New York etc. 1990, 133-160.,
  • Harris, James F., Rethinking the Categories of the German Revolution of 1848: The Emergence of Popular Conservatism in Bavaria, in: Central European History 25 (1992), 123-148.
  • Hausmann, Franz Joseph, A soldier for Napoleon. The campaigns of Lieutenant Franz Joseph Hausmann, 7th Bavarian Infantry. Transl. by Cynthia Joy Hausmann, London 1998.
  • Herbstritt, Helen – Hollermann, Ephrem, Record of a Journey: Mother Benedicta Riepp and Campanions travel to North America, in: American Benedictine Review 64 (2013), 67-92 and 198-213.
  • Jackson, Myles W., Spectrum of Belief: Joseph von Fraunhofer and the Craft of Precision Optics, Cambridge / Mass. 2000.
  • Jelavich, Barbara, Russia, Bavaria and the Greek Revolution of 1862-1863, in: Balkan Studies 2 (1961), 125-150.
  • Kaiser, Michael, A matter of Survival: Bavaria becomes a Kingdom, in: Forrest, Alan (ed.), The Bee and the Eagle. Napoleonic France and the End of the Holy Roman Empire, New York 2009, 94-111.
  • Katz, Jacob, The Hep-Hep Riots in Germany of 1819: The Historical Background, in: Zion 38 (1973), 62-115.
  • King, David J., The Ideology Behind a Business Activity: The Case of the Nuremburg-Fürth Railway, in: Business & Economic History 20 (1991), 162-170.
  • Knoll, Martin, Urban needs and changing environments: Regensburg’s wood supply from the earlymodern period to industrialization, in: Zelko, Frank (ed.), From Heimat to Umwelt. New perspectives on German environmental history (Bulletin of the German Historical Institute: Supplement 3), Washington DC 2006, 77-101.
  • Lee, William Robert, Population Growth, Economic Development and Social Change in Bavaria 1750-1850, PhD. New York 1977.
  • Mayr, Norbert Joseph, Particularism in Bavaria: State Policy and the Public Sentiment, 1806-1906, PhD. Chapel Hill 1988.
  • Moran, Daniel, Toward the century of words. Johann Cotta and the politics of the public realm in Germany 1795-1832, Berkeley etc. 1990.
  • Müller, Philipp, Using the Archive: Exclusive clues about the past and the politics of the archive in nineteenth-century Bavaria, in: Storia della Storiografia 62 (2012), 27-53.
  • Murrman, Warren D., Gregory Scherr and Boniface Wimmer: United in Friendship across “Lands and Seas”, in: American Benedictine Review 68 (2017), 301-322.
  • Naser, Markus, Franconian, Bavarian or German? Regional Identity and National Concepts in 19th Century Franconia, in: Bindas, Kenneth J. – Ricciardelli, Fabrizio (eds.), Regional History as Cultural Identity, Roma 2017, 199-210.
  • Neufeld, Michael, German Artisans and Political Repression:The Fall of the Journeymen’s Associations in Nuremberg, 1806-1868, in: Journal of Social History 19 (1986), 491-502.
  • Neufeld, Michael J., The skilled metalworkers of Nuremberg: craft and class in the industrial revolution, New Brunswick etc. 1989.
  • Ott, Martin, Crossing the Atlantic: Bavarian Diplomacy and the Formation of Consular Services Overseas, 1820-1871, in: Mößlang, Markus – Riotte, Torsten (ed.), The Diplomats’ World. The cultural history of diplomacy (Studies of the German Historical Institute London), Oxford 2008, 381-405.
  • Ottosen, Morten Nordhafen, Religion and Secularization in Bavaria in the Age of Revolution, in: Banks, Bryan A. – Johnson, Erica (eds.), The French Revolution and Religion in Global Perspective. Freedom and Faith, Basingstoke 2017, 173-201.
  • Phayer, Michael J., Lower-Class Morality: The Case of Bavaria, in: Journal of Social History 8 (1974), 79-95.
  • Planert, Ute, From Collaboration to Resistance: Politics, Experience, and Memory of the Revolutionary and Napoleonic Wars in Southern Germany, in: Central European History 39 (2006), 676-705.
  • Pohlsander, Hans A., National Monuments and Nationalism in 19th century Germany, Oxford etc. 2008, 129-146 [Chapter VI: Ludwig I of Bavaria, the Walhalla, the Befreiungshalle, and Related Monuments]
  • Prutsch, Markus Josef, Making Sense of Constitutional Monarchism in Post-Napoleonic France and Germany, Basingstoke u.a. 2013.
  • Putz, Hannelore, Artistic encounters: British perspectives on Bavaria and Saxony in the Vormärz, in: Bulletin of the German Historical Institute London 34 (2012), 3-33.
  • Schleunes, Karl A., Schooling and society. The politics of education in Prussia and Bavaria 1750-1900, Oxford u.a. 1989.
  • Schneider, Joanne F., An historical examination of women´s education in Bavaria. Mädchenschulen and contemporary attitudes about them, PhD. Brown University 1977.
  • Schneider, Joanne F., Enlightened Reforms and Bavarian Girls´ Education. Tradition through Innovation, in: Fout, John C. (ed.), German Women in the Nineteenth Century. A Social History, New York / London 1984, 55-71.
  • Schulte, Regina, Poachers in Upper Bavaria in 1848: Crime or Conflict? in: Evans, Richard J. (ed.), The German Underworld. Deviants and Outcasts in German History, London etc. 1988, 141-158.
  • Schulte, Regina, The village in court. Arson, infanticide, and poaching in the court records of Upper Bavaria, 1848-1910, Cambridge etc. 1994.
  • Schulte, Regina, Civil Society, State Law and Village Norm. Semantic Conflict in Nineteenth-Century Rural Germany, in: Crime, Histoire et Sociétés 1 (1997), 75-89.
  • Switzer, Andrew – Bertolini, Luca – Grin, John, Understanding transitions in the regional transport and land-use system: Munich 1945–2013, in: Town Planning Review 86 (2015), 699-723.
  • Segal, Zef, Real, Actual and Imagined Borders -State Construction in the »Third Germany«, in: Tel Aviver Jahrbuch für Deutsche Geschichte 40 (2012), 21-43.
  • Semrad, Alexandra, Modern secondary education and economic performance: The introduction of the Gewerbeschule and the Realschule in nineteenth-century Bavaria, in: Economic history review 68 (2015), 1306-1338.
  • Sharfman, Glenn R., Bavarians and Jews: A Study in Integration and Exclusion during the Nineteenth Century, in: Journal of Religious History 19 (1995), 125-140.
  • Shorter, Edward L., Social change and social policy in Bavaria 1800-1860, PhD. Cambridge / Mass. 1967.
  • Showalter, Denis, The Wars of German Unification, London etc. 22015.
  • Stark, Heinz, An American pioneer from Bavaria: The George Schramm story, in: Yearbook of German-American Studies 41 (2007), 27-47.
  • Stolberg, Michael, National Statistics on the Causes of Death in nineteenth-century Bavaria, in: Journal of the History of Medicine & Allied Sciences 54 (1999), 210-225.
  • Stoneman, Mark R., The Bavarian Army and French Civilians in the War of 1870-1871: A Cultural Interpretation, in: War in History 8 (2001), 271-293.
  • Taylor, Richard S., German auxiliaries in the American revolution. A reevaluation of the Soldatenhandel as it transpired in the Markgraftum of Ansbach-Bayreuth, Little Rock 1996.
  • Tannenbaum, William Z., From community to citizenship: The Jews of rural Franconia 1801-1862, PhD. Stanford 1989.
  • Tannenbaum, William Z., A town on the Volkach: The acculturation of the Jews of Zeilitzheim in the nineteenth century, in: Yearbook of the Leo-Baeck-Institute 45 (2000), 93-117.
  • Trakas, William Samuel, Particularism in Bavaria and Württemberg, 1866-1870, PhD. Madison 1979.
  • Welch, Steven R., Subjects or Citizens? Elementary School Policy and Practice in Bavaria, 1800-1918 (University of Melbourne History Monographs 26), Melbourne 1998.
  • Welch, Steven R., Revolution and Reprisal: Bavarian Schoolteachers in the 1848 Revolution, in: History of Education Quarterly 41 (2001), 25-57.
  • Werner, George Stephen, Bavaria in the German Confederation, 1820-1848, Rutherford etc. 1977.
  • Werner, George Stephen, Travelling Journeymen in Metternichian South Germany, in: Proceedings of the American Philosophical Society 125 (1981), 190-219.
  • Winter, Emma L., Between Louis and Ludwig. From the culture of French power to the power of German culture, c. 1789-1848, in: Scott, Hamish – Simms, Brendan (eds.), Cultures of Power in Europe during the Long Eighteenth Century, Cambridge 2009, 348-368.
  • Wright, Frank Deedmyer, The Bavarian Patriotic Party, 1868-1871, PhD. Urbana-Champaign 1975.
  • Ziblatt, Daniel, Structuring the state. The formation of Italy and Germany and the puzzle of federalism, Princeton etc. 2006.

1871–1914: Bavaria in the German Empire

  • Abbott, John, Peasant Economic Calculation and the Household Economy in Imperial Germany, in: Essays in Economic & Business History 17 (1999), 37-47.
  • Balzer, Isabel, Exhibiting Unified Germany, 1871-1889: Bavaria, Prussia and Cultural Competition, PhD. Northwestern University 1997.
  • Blessing, Werner K., The Cult of Monarchy, Politcal Loyalty and the Workers´ Movement in Imperial Germany, in: Journal of Contemporary History 13 (1978), 357-375. [Situation in Bavaria]
  • Belchem, John, Large towns: Liverpool, Lyon and Munich, in: Robert, Jean-Louis et al. (ed.), The emergence of European trade unionism, Burlington 2001, 121-137.
  • Brown, John C. – Guinnane, Timothy W., Fertility transition in a rural, Catholic population: Bavaria, 1880–1910, in: Population Studies 56 (2002), 35-50.
  • Buschmann, Max, Between the Federative Nation and the National State. Public Perceptions of the Foundation of the German Empire in Southern Germany and Austria, in: Cole, Laurence (ed.), Different Paths to the Nation. Regional and national identities in Central Europe and Italy 1830-70, New York 2007, 157-179.
  • Campbell, Frederick F., The Bavarian army, 1870-1918. The constitutional and structural relations with the Prussian military establishment, PhD. Columbus 1973.
  • Caruso, Marcelo, Liberal governance and the making of hierarchies: Oberlehrer in Munich’s elementary schools (1871-1918), in: Journal of Educational Administration & History 41 (2009), 223-237.
  • Cremer, Douglas J., The Limits of Maternalism. Gender Ideology and the South German Catholic Workingwoman´s Associations, 1904-1918, in: Catholic Historical Review. 87 (2001), 428-452.
  • Dickinson, Edward Ross, “Must we dance naked?”: Art, Beauty, and Law in Munich and Paris, 1911-1913, in: Journal of the History of Sexuality 20 (2011), 95-131.
  • Farr, Ian, From Anti-Catholicism to Anticlericalism: Catholic Politics and the Peasantry in Bavaria 1860-1900, in: European Studies Review 13 (1983), 249-269.
  • Farr, Ian, In search of credit: Peasant farmers, credit co-operatives and rural organisation in Bavaria at the turn of the century, in: Jahrbuch für Wirtschaftsgeschichte 2000, 113-132.
  • Farr, Ian, Farmers’ Cooperatives in Bavaria, 1880–1914: ‘State-Help’ and ‘Self-Help’ in Imperial Germany, in: Rural History 18 (2007), 163-182.
  • Fink, Erwin, Symbolic Representations of the Nation: Baden, Bavaria and Saxony, c. 1860-80, in: Cole, Laurence (ed.), Different Paths to the Nation. Regional and national identities in Central Europe and Italy 1830-70, New York 2007, 200-219.
  • Ford, Graham, Organisation and conflict in the Nuremberg building trades 1878-1914, PhD. East Anglia 1992.
  • Ford, Graham, In Search of Industrial Order: The Case of Nuremberg’s Building Masters, 1887-1914, in: German History 19 (2001), 54-74.
  • Ford, Graham, Positive Integration in Wilhelmine Germany: the case of Nuremberg’s building workers, 1899-1914, in: European History Quarterly 34 (2004), 215-244.
  • Fuhrmeister, Christian – Kohle, Hubertus – Thielemans, Veerle (eds.), American artists in Munich: Artistic migration and cultural exchange processes (Veröffentlichungen des Zentralinstituts für Kunstgeschichte in München 21), Berlin etc. 2010.
  • Ghattas, Monika White, Patronage and Painters in Munich, 1870-1910, PhD. University of New Mexico 1986.
  • Greaves, Peter, In the Bavarian highlands: Edward Elgar’s German holidays in the 1890s (Elgar Monographs 1), Rickmansworth 2001.
  • Gonon, Philipp, The Quest for Modern Vocational Education: George Kerschensteiner between Dewey, Weber and Simmel (Studien zur Berufs- und Weiterbildung 9), Bern etc. 2009.
  • Halgus, Joseph David, The Bavarian Soldier, 1871-1914: Efforts to Use Military Training as a Means of Strengthening a Consensus in Favor of the Existing Order, PhD. New York 1980.
  • Hamlin, Daniel, Water and empire – Germany, Bavaria and the Danube in World War I, in: First World War Studies 3 (2012), 65-85.
  • Harris, James F., The People Speak! Anti-Semitism and emancipation in nineteenth-century Bavaria, Ann Arbor 1994.
  • Has-Ellison, J. Trygve, `True Art Is Always an Aristocratic Matter’: Nobles and the Fine Arts in Bavaria, 1890-1914, PhD. Memphis 2004.
  • Has-Ellison, J. Trygve, Nobles, Modernism, and the Culture of fin de siécle Munich, in: German History 26 (2008), 1-23.
  • Healy, Róisín, The fall of the Jesuit law: The Bavarian “Backdoor” of 1912, in: Ibid. (ed.), The Jesuit Specter in Imperial Germany, Boston / Leiden 2003, 203-211.
  • Hiles, Timothy W., Thomas Theodor Heine. Fin-de-siècle Munich and the origins of “Simplicissimus” (Literature and the visual arts 9), New York etc. 1996.
  • Hollmann, Eckhard, The Blue Rider, München etc. 2011.
  • Howard, Thomas A., The Pope and the professor: Pius IX, Ignaz von Döllinger, and the quandary of the modern age, Oxford 2017.
  • Jelavich, Peter, Art and Mammon in Wilhelmine Germany: The Case of Frank Wedekind, in: Central European History 12 (1979), 203-236.
  • Jelavich, Peter, Theater in Munich, 1890-1914. A study in the social origins of modernist culture, PhD. Princeton 1982.
  • Jelavich, Peter (ed.), Munich and Theatrical Modernism: Politics, Playwriting, and Performance 1890-1914, Cambridge etc. 1985.
  • Jelavich, Peter, The Censorship of Literary Naturalism, 1890–1895: Bavaria, in: Central European History 18 (1985), 344-359.
  • Jerram, Leif, Bureaucratic passions and the colonies of modernity: an urban elite, city frontiers and the rural other in Germany, 1890-1920, in: Urban History 34 (2007), 390-406.
  • Jerram, Leif, Germany’s other modernity: Munich and the making of metropolis, 1895-1930, Manchester 2014.
  • Kandler, Robert, The Effects of Economic and Social Conditions on the Development of the Free Trade Unions in Upper Franconia, 1890-1914, PhD. Oxford 1986.
  • Kennedy, Katharine D., Regionalism and Nationalism in South German History Lessons, 1871-1914, in: German Studies Review 12 (1989), 11-33.
  • Kochmann, Adrienne, Russian émigré artists in Munich, 1890-1914. Cultural mission and the development of artistic identity, PhD. Chicago 1997.
  • Kultermann, Udo, The Idea of “Gesamtkunstwerk” – Lenbachhaus and Stuckvilla in Munich, in: Konsthistorisk Tidskrift. Journal of Art History 64 (1995), 163-176.
  • Large, David C., The Political Background of the Foundation of the Bayreuth Festival, 1876, in: Central European History 11 (1978), 162-172.
  • Lenman, Robin, Art and tourism in Southern Germany 1850-1930, in: Marwick, Arthur (ed.), The arts, literature, and society, London etc. 1990, 163-180.
  • Lenman, Robin, A Community in Transition: Painters in Munich, 1886-1924, in: Central European History 15 (1982), 3-33.
  • Lepik, Andres – Bäumler, Katrin (eds.), The Architecture under King Ludwig II: Palaces and Factories, Basel 2018.
  • Makela, Maria M., The Munich Secession. Art and artists in turn-of-the-century Munich, Princeton 1990.
  • Makela, Maria M., The politics of parody: Some thoughts on the “Modern” in turn-of-the-century Munich, in: Forster-Hahn, Françoise (ed.), Imagining modern German Culture 1889-1910 (Studies in the history of art 53), Hanover etc. 1996, 185-207.
  • Mayer, James Douglas, Bavarian Breweries and Brewmasters, 1871-1914: A Study of Mittelstandspolitik and German Economic Modernization, PhD. Cambridge / Mass. 1982.
  • Mayr, Norbert J., Catholic Church and Industrial Worker, Rejection or Ejection: Augsburg 1880-1900, in: German Studies Review 13 (1990), 225-242.
  • Müller, Frank Lorenz, Royal Heirs in Imperial Germany. The Future of Monarchy in Nineteenth-Century Bavaria, Saxony and Württemberg, London 2017.
  • Napachihi, Sebastian Wolfgang, The relationship between the German missionaries of the congregation of St. Benedict from St. Ottilien and the German colonial authorities in Tanzania 1887-1907, Peramiho 1998.
  • Neunzert, Hartfried (ed.), Mansel Lewis & Hubert Herkomer: Wales, England, Bavaria. Deutsch – English (Kunstgeschichtliches aus Landsberg am Lech 22), Landsberg am Lech 1999.
  • Neve, Monica, Sold! Advertising and the bourgeois female consumer in Munich, 1900-1914 (Studien zur Geschichte des Alltags 28), Stuttgart 2010.
  • Peters, Lisa N., “Youthful Enthusiasm under a Hospitable Sky”: American Artists in Polling, Germany, 1870s-1880s, in: American Art Journal 31 (2000), 56-91.
  • Rosenbaum, Adam T., Grounded Modernity in the Bavarian Alps: The Reichenhall Spa Culture at the Turn of the Twentieth Century, in: Central European History 47 (2014), 30-53.
  • Sackett, Robert E., Popular entertainment, class, and politics in Munich 1900-1923, Cambridge etc. 1982.
  • Sackett, Robert E., Antimodernism in the popular entertainment of modern Munich: Attitude, institution, language, in: New German Critique 57 (1992), 123-155.-
  • Schilling, Donald G., Politics in a new key: The late nineteenth-century transformation of politics in northern Bavaria, in: German Studies Review 17 (1994), 33-57.
  • Segel, Harold B., Turn-of-the-Century Cabaret: Barcelona, Berlin, Munich, Vienna, Cracow, Moscow, St. Petersburg, Zurich, New York 1987.
  • Southern, Gilbert Edwin, The Bavarian Kulturkampf. A chapter in government, church, and society in the early Bismarckreich, PhD. University of Massachusetts 1978.
  • Spiekermann, Uwe, The retail milk trade in transition: A case-study of Munich, 1840-1913, in: Lysaght, Patricia (ed.), Milk and milk products from medieval to modern times, Edinburgh 1994, 71-93.
  • Stodolsky, Catherine Ekstein, Missionary of the Feminine Mystique: The Female Teacher in Prussia and Bavaria 1880-1920, PhD. New York 1987.
  • Umbach, Maiken, German cities and bourgeois modernism 1890-1924, Oxford etc. 2009.
  • Wieber, Sabine, Staging the Past: Allotria’s ‘Festzug Karl V’ and German national identity, in: Rethinking History 10 (2006), 523-551.
  • Wieber, Sabine, Eduard Grützner’s Munich Villa and the German Renaissance, in: Intellectual History Review 17 (2007), 153-174.
  • Zimmer, Oliver, Urban Economies and the National Imagination: The German South, 1860-1914, in: Whyte, William (ed.), Nationalism and the reshaping of urban communities in Europe, 1848-1914, Basingstoke etc. 2011, 257-286.

1914–1933: The First World War and Bavaria under the Weimar Republic

  • Abbott, John, Peasants in the Rural Public. The Bavarian Bauernbund 1893-1933, Chicago 2000.
  • Ablovatski, Eliza Johnson, `Cleansing the Red Nest’: Counterrevolution and White Terror in Munich and Budapest, 1919, PhD. Columbia University 2005.
  • Ablovatski, Eliza Johnson, The 1919 Central European Revolutions and the Judeo-Bolshevik Myth, in: European Review of History 17 (2010), 473-489.
  • Anheier, Helmut K. – Neidhardt, Friedhelm – Vortkamp, Wolfgang, Movement Cycles and the Nazi Party: Activities of the Munich NSDAP, 1925-1930, in: American Bevahorial Scientist 41 (1998), 1262-1282.
  • Anheier, Helmut K. – Neidhardt, Friedhelm, The Nazi Party and Its Capital: An Analysis of the NSDAP Membership in Munich, 1925-1930, in: American Bevahorial Scientist 41 (1998), 1219-1237.
  • Bakic, Dragan, Britain and Interwar Danubian Europe. Foreign Policy and Security Challanges 1919-1936, London u.a. 2017.
  • Bargain-Villéger, Alban, The Quest for Acceptability: The Socialists’ May Days in Bavaria and Brittany, 1920-40, in: Canadian Journal of History 48 (2013), 63-86.
  • Biesinger, Joseph Anton, The presidental election in Bavaria in 1925 and 1932 in relation to the Reich, PhD. New Brunswick 1972.
  • Bischoff, William Ludwig, Artists, Intellectuals and Revolution. Munich 1918-1919, PhD. Cambridge/Mass. 1970.
  • Bischoff, William Ludwig, The Action Committee of Revolutionary Artists in the Munich Revolution of 1918-1919, in: Studies in Modern European History & Culture 3 (1977), 7-35.
  • Boff, Jonathan, Haig’s enemy. Crown Prince Rupprecht and Germany’s war on the Western Front, Oxford 2018.
  • Brenner, Arthur David, Emil J. Gumbel. Weimar German Pacifist and Professor, Boston / MA 2001.
  • Brockmann, Stephen, Nuremberg. The imaginary capital, Rochester 2006.
  • Bronner, Stephen Eric, Modernists in power. The literati and the Bavarian Revolution, in: Ibid. (ed.), Modernism at the barricades, New York 2012, 119-134.
  • Burkhardt, Alex, A republican potential: The rise and fall of the German Democratic Party in Hof-an-der-Saale, 1918-1920, in: Central European History 50 (2016), 471-492.
  • Burkhardt, Alex, Postwar ‘Existential Conflict’ and Right-Wing-Politics in Hof an der Saale, 1918-1924, in: German History 36 (2018), 522-543.
  • Clemens, Detlev, The “Bavarian Mussolini” and his “Beerhall Putsch”: British Images of Adolf Hitler, 1920-1924, in: The English Historical Review 114 (1999), 64-84.
  • Collar, Peter, The propaganda war in the Rhineland. Weimar Germany, Race and Occupation after World War I (International library of twentieth century history 57), London 2013.
  • Coppa, Frank J., The Policies and Politics of Pope Pius XII: Between diplomacy and mortality, New York etc. 2011. [Nuncio in Bavaria]
  • Cremer, Douglas J., `To Avoid a New Kulturkampf’: The Catholic Workers’ Associations and National Socialism in Weimar-era Bavaria, in: Journal of Church & State 41 (1999), 739-760.
  • Dillon, Christopher, ‘We’ll Meet Again in Dachau’: The Early Dachau SS and the Narrative of Civil War, in: Journal of Contemporary History 45 (2010), 535-554.
  • Dorondo, David R., Bavaria and German federalism. Reich to Republic: 1918-1933 / 1945-1949, Basingstoke u. a. 1992.
  • Douglas, Donald M., The Early Ortsgruppen. The Develpoment of National Socialist Local Groups 1919-1923, Lawrence / KS 1968.
  • Douglas, Donald M., The Parent Cell: Some Computer Notes on the Composition of the First Nazi Party Group in Munich, 1919-21, in: Central European History 10 (1977), 55-72.
  • Duffy, Eve, Representing Science and Technology: Politics and Display in the Deutsches Museum, 1903-1945, PhD. University of North Carolina 2002.
  • Duffy, Eve, Oskar von Miller and the Art of the Electrical Exhibition: Staging Modernity in Weimar Germany, in: German History 25 (2007), 517-538.
  • Ehlers, Carol Jean, Nuremberg, Julius Streicher and the Burgeois Transition to Nazism, 1918-1924, PhD. University of Colorado 1975.
  • Ellis, Robert, Ernst Toller and German Society. Intellectuals as Leaders and Critics, 1914-1939, Madison 2013.
  • Engstrom, Eric J. et al., Psychiatric governance, völkisch corporatism, and the German Research Institute of Psychiatry in Munich (1912–26), in: History of Psychiatry 27 (2016), 38-50 and 137-152.
  • Garnett, Robert S., Lion, Eagle and Swastika. Bavarian Monarchism in Weimar Germany 1918-1933, New York 1991.
  • Gerwarth, Robert, The Central-European Counter Revolution: Paramilitary violence in Germany, Austria and Hungary after the Great War, in: Past and Present 200 (2008), 175-209.
  • Gerwarth, Robert, Fighting the Red Beast: Counter-Revolutionary Violence in the Defeated States of Central Europe, in: Böhler, Jochen (Hg.), Legacies of violence: Eastern Europe´s First World War (EuropasOstenim 20. Jahrhundert 3), München 2014, 209-234.
  • Geyer, Martin H., Munich in turmoil. Social protest and the revolutionary movement 1918-19, in: Wrigley, Chris (ed.), Challenges of labour, London etc. 1993, 51-71.
  • Grunberger, Richard, Red Rising in Bavaria, London 1973.
  • Gordon, Harold J., Hitler and the Beer Hall Putsch, Princeton 1972.
  • Ham, Paul, Young Hitler. The Making of the Führer, Sydney 2017.
  • Harsch, Donna, Codes of Comradeship. Class, Leadership, and Tradition in Munich Social Democracy, in: Central European History 31 (1998), 385-412.
  • Hastings, Derek, How “Catholic” Was the Early Nazi Movement? Religion, Race, and Culture in Munich, 1919-1924, in: Central European History 36 (2003), 383-433.
  • Hastings, Derek, Catholicism and the Roots of Nazism. Religious Identity and National Socialism, New York 2010.
  • Hayward, Nicolas F., The first Nazi town, New York 1988. [Coburg]
  • Heberle, Lauren Carola, Gender, Social Class, and Social Ties in Extremist Social Movements: The NSDAP in Munich, 1925-1929, PhD. Rutgers University 2003.
  • Herwig, Holger H., The Demon of Geopolitics: How Karl Haushofer “educated” Hitler and Hess, Lanham etc. 2016.
  • Hölzl, Richard, Nature Conservation in the age of Classical Modernity: The LandesausschussfürNaturpflege and the Bund Naturschutz in Bavaria 1905-1933, in: Scala, Stephen J. (ed.), From “Heimat” to “Umwelt”: New perspectives on German environmental history (Bulletin of the German Historical Institute, Supplement 3), Washington DC 2006, 27-52.
  • Holmes, Kim M., The NSDAP and the crisis of agrarian conservatism in Lower Bavaria. National socialism and the peasants road to modernity, New York 1991.
  • Hopwood, Robert F., Mobilization of a Nationalist Community, 1919-1923, in: German History 10 (1992), 149-176. [Kulmbach]
  • Ihrig, Stefan, “Ankara in Munich”. The Hitler Putsch and Turkey, in: Ibid. (ed.), Atatürk in the Nazi imagination, Cambridge etc. 2014, 68-107.
  • Jablonsky, David, The Nazi Party in Dissolution. Hitler and the Verbotszeit 1923-1925, London u.a. 1989.
  • Jones, Larry E., Nationalism, Particularism, and the Collapse of the Bavarian Liberal Parties in the Early Weimar Republic, 1918-1924, in: JahrbuchzurLiberalismus-Forschung 14 (2002), 105-142.
  • Jones, Mark, Founding Weimar. Violence and the German Revolution of 1918/19, Cambridge 2016.
  • Jones, Nigel, A brief history of the birth of the Nazis, London 2004.
  • Kater, Michael H., The Nazi Party. A Social Profile of Members and Leaders, 1919-1945, Cambridge 1983.
  • Kauders, Anthony, German politics and the Jews: Düsseldorf and Nuremberg 1910-1933, Oxford etc. 1996.
  • Kellog, Michael, The Russian Roots of Nazism. White Emigrés and the Making of National-Socialism, 1917-1945, Cambridge 2008.
  • King, David, The Trial of Adolf Hitler. The Beer Hall Putsch and the Rise of Nazi Germany, New York / London 2017
  • Koepp, Roy G., Conservative Radicals: The Einwohnerwehr, Bund Bayern und Reich, and the Limits of Paramilitary Politics in Bavaria, 1918-1928, PhD. Lincoln / Nebraska 2010.
  • Koepp, Roy G., Gustav von Kahr and the Emergence of the Radical Right in Bavaria, in: The Historian 77 (2015), 740-763.
  • Kurlander, Eric, Hitler’s Monsters: The Occult Roots of Nazism and the Emergence of the Nazi ‘Supernatural Imaginary’, in: German History 30 (2012), 528-549 [Thule Society]
  • Large, David Clay, Politics of Law and Order. A History of the Bavarian Einwohnerwehr 1918-1921, Philadelphia 1980.
  • Large, David Clay, Where Ghosts Walked. Munich’s road to the Third Reich, New York etc. 2017.
  • Lamb, Stephen, Intellectuals and the challenge of power: The case of the Munich “Räterepublik”, in: Phelan, Anthony (ed.), The Weimar dilemma: Intellectuals in the Weimar Republic, Manchester / Dover 1985, 132-161.
  • Layton, Roland V., The Völkischer Beobachter, 1920–1933: The Nazi Party Newspaper in the Weimar Era, in: Central European History 3 (1970), 353-382.
  • Liang, Oliver, The Biology of Morality: Criminal Biology in Bavaria, 1924-1933, in: Becker, Peter (ed.), Criminals and their Scientists: The history of Criminology in International Perspective, Cambridge etc. 2006, 425-446.
  • Madden, Paul, Some Social Characteristics of Early Nazi Party Members, 1919-23, in: Central European History 15 (1982), 34-56.
  • Magub, Roshan, Edgar Julius Jung, right-wing enemy of the Nazis. A political biography, Rochester 2017. [Occupied Palatinate]
  • Marwell, David G., Unwanted Exile. A Biography of Ernst “Putzi” Hanfstaengl, PhD. Binghampton 1988.
  • McGee, James H., The Political Police in Bavaria, 1919-1936, PhD. University of Florida 1980.
  • Memming, Rolf B., The Bavarian governmental district Unterfrankenand the city Burgstadt 1922-1939. A study of the national socialist movement and party-state affairs, PhD. Lincoln 1974.
  • Menke, Martin, Multiple Caesars? Germany, Bavaria, and German Catholics in the interwar period, in: Budde, Michael L. (ed.), Beyond the borders of baptism (Studies in World Catholicism 1), Eugene 2016, 91-103.
  • Menze, Ernest A., War Aims and the Liberal Conscience: Lujo Brentano and Annexationism During the First World War, in: Central European History 17 (1984), 140-158.
  • Mitchell, Otis C., The Munich matrix of right radicalism, in: Ders. (ed.), Hitler´s stormtroopers and the attack on the German Republic, Jefferson/NC 2008, 38-45.
  • Mitchell, Otis C., The Bavarian paramilitary scene (1919-1923), in: ders. (ed.), Hitler´s stormtroopers and the attack on the German Republic, Jefferson/NC 2008, 57-71.
  • Mitchell, Otis C., The failed putsch, in: Ders. (ed.), Hitler´s stormtroopers and the attack on the German Republic, Jefferson/NC 2008, 72-82.
  • Morris, Douglas G., Justice Imperiled: The Anti-Nazi Lawyer Max Hirschberg in Weimar Germany, Ann Arbor 2005.
  • Mühlberger, Detlef, Hitler´s Voice. The Völkischer Beobachter 1920-1933, 2 Bde., Oxford 2004.
  • Munro, Gregory, Hitler’s Bavarian antagonist: Georg Moenius and the Allgemeine Rundschau of Munich 1929-1933, Lewiston/NY 2006.
  • Nastasă-Matei, Irina, A Chapter of Student Migration History: Romanians at the University of Munich before Second World War, in: Romanian Journal of Population Studies 12 (2018), 99-118.
  • Nelson, Otto M., “Simplicissimus” and the Rise of National Socialism, in: Historian 40 (1978), 441-462.
  • Orlow, Dietrich, The History of the Nazi Party: 1919-1933, Pittsburgh 1969.
  • Osmond, Jonathan, Rural Protest in the Weimar Republic. The Free Peasantry in the Rhineland and Bavaria, Basingstoke etc. 1993.
  • Pridham, Geoffrey, Hitler´s Rise to Power. The Nazi Movement in Bavaria, New York / London 1973.
  • Reiche, Eric G., The Development of the SA in Nürnberg, 1922-1934, Cambridge 1986.
  • Richter, Michaela W., Resource mobilisation and legal revolution. National socialist tactics in Franconia, in: Childers, Thomas (ed.), The formation of the Nazi constituency, Totowa 1986, 104-130.
  • Rosenfeld, Gavriel D., Monuments and the Politics of Memory. Commemorating Kurt Eisner and the Bavarian Revolutions of 1918/19 in Postwar Munich, in: Central European History 30 (1997), 221-251.
  • Sackett, Robert Eben, Popular entertainment, class and politics in Munich, 1900 –1923, Cambridge/ Mass. u. a . 1982.
  • Scheck, Raphael, Alfred von Tirpitz and German Right-Wing Politics 1914-1930, 1998
  • Schröder, Wilhelm, Max Weber in Munich (1919/20). Science and Politics in the last year of his life, in: Max Weber Studies 13 (2013), 15-37.
  • Schützeichel, Rainer, Expressing Politics in Urban Planning: Two Projects by Herman Sörgel for Munich between the Monarchy and Republic, in: Ruhl, Carsten – Dähne, Chris – Hoekstra, Rixt (eds.), The Death and Life of the Total Work of Art: Henry van de Velde and the Legacy of a Modern Concept, Berlin 2015, 105-127.
  • Seipp, Adam R.,’Scapegoats for a lost war’: Demobilisation, the Kapp Putsch, and the politics of the streets in Munich, 1919-1920, in: War & society 25 (2006), 35-54.
  • Seipp, Adam R., “An immeasurable sacrifice of blood and treasure”: Demobilization, reciprocity, and the politics of the streets in Munich and Manchester, 1917-1921, in: Reiss, Matthias (ed.), The street as a stage (Studies of the German Historical Institute London), Oxford etc. 2007, 127-145.
  • Seipp, Adam R., The Ordeal of Peace. Demobilization and the Urban Experience in Britain and Germany 1917-1921, Farnham 2009.
  • Smith, Bradley F., Heinrich Himmler: A Nazi in the making 1900-1926, Stanford 1971.
  • Stachura, Peter D., Gregor Strasser and the rise of Nazism, London 1983.
  • Stehlin, Stuart A., Weimar and the Vatican 1919-1933. German-Vatican diplomatic relations in the interwar years, Princeton 1983.
  • Sutterlin, Siegfried H., Munich in the Cobwebs of Berlin, Washington, and Moscow: Foreign political tendencies in Bavaria 1917-1919 (Studies in Modern European History 12), New York u.a. 1995.
  • Urbach, Karina, Go-betweens for Hitler, Oxford 2015, 165-216.
  • Weber, Thomas, Hitler’s First War. Adolf Hitler, the men of the List Regiment, and the First World War, Oxford etc. 2010.
  • Weber, Thomas, Becoming Hitler. The making of a Nazi, New York 2017.
  • Wenninger-Richter, Michaela, The National Socialist Electoral Breakthrough: Opportunities and limits in the Weimar party system. A regional case study of Franconia, PhD. New York 1982.
  • Wiecki, Stefan, Undertakers of the Weimar Republic? The Nazification of Munich Professors, 1918-1933, in: Proceedings of the South Carolina Historical Association 2011, 73-88.
  • Zehetmair, Sebastian, Disputed memory: The Munich Council Republic and the KPD’s Politics of History (Geschichtspolitik), in: Twentieth Century Communism 5 (2013), 41-64.
  • Ziemann, Benjamin, War experiences in rural Germany 1914-1923 (The legacy of the Great War), Oxford 2007.

1933–1945: Nazi Germany

  • Becker, Winfried, The Nazi Seizure of Power in Bavaria and the Demise of the Bavarian People’s Party, in: Beck, Hermann – Jones, Larry Eugene (eds.), From Weimar to Hitler. Studies in the Dissolution of the Weimar Republic and the Establishment of the Third Reich, 1932-1934, New York / Oxford 2019, 111-140
  • Benz, Wolfgang (ed.), Dachau and the Nazi Terror 1933-1945. 2 Vol. Dachau 2002/2004.
  • Berrinberg, Elisabeth von, The City in Flames. A child’s recollection of World War II in Würzburg, Germany, Minneapolis 2013.
  • Delaney, John Joseph, Rural Catholics, Polish Workers and Nazi racial policy in Bavaria, PhD. University of New York 1995.
  • Delaney, John Joseph, Social contact and personal relations of German catholic peasants and polish workers (POWs, civilian, and forced laborers) in Bavaria’s rural war economy, 1939-1945, in: Annali dell’Istituto Storico Italo-Germanico in Trento 28 (2002), 389-404.
  • Dillon, Christopher, Dachau and the SS. A schooling in violence, Oxford 2015.
  • Donohoe, James, Hitler’s conservative opponents in Bavaria 1930-1945. A study of catholic, monarchist, and separatist anti-Nazi activities, Leiden 1961.
  • Dumbach, Annette E., Shattering the German night: The story of the White Rose, Boston etc. 1986.
  • Eiber, Ludwig, The persecution of the Sinti and Roma in Munich 1933-1945, in: Tebbut, Susan (ed.), Sinti and Roma (Culture and society in Germany 2), New York etc. 1998, 17-33.
  • Fischer, Stefanie, Economic trust in the “Racial State”. A case study from the German countryside, in: Bajohr, Frank – Löw, Andrea (eds.), The Holocaust and European societies, London 2016, 47-67. [Middle Franconia]
  • Fritz, Stephen G., “This is the way wars end, with a bang not a whimper”. Middle Franconia in April 1945, in: War and Society 18 (2000), 121-153.
  • Gellately, Robert, The Gestapo and German Society: Enforcing Racial Policy, 1933-1945, New York 1990. [Würzburg, Unterfranken]
  • Gregor, Neill, A Schicksalsgemeinschaft? Allied bombing, civilian morale, and social dissolution in Nuremberg, 1942-1945, in: The historical journal 43 (2000), 1051-1070.
  • Gregor, Neill, Siegmund von Hausegger, the Munich Philharmonic Orchestra and Civic Musical Culture in the Third Reich, in: German History 36 (2018), 544-573.
  • Hagen, Joshua – Ostergren, Robert, Spectacle, Architecture and Place at the Nuremberg Party Rallies: Projecting a Nazi Vision of Past, Present and Future, in: Cultural Geographies 13 (2006), 157-182.
  • Hagen, Joshua, Parades, Public Space, and Propaganda: The Nazi Culture Parades in Munich, in: Geografiska Annaler. Series B: Human Geography 90 (2008), 349-369.
  • Harrison, E. D. R., Gauleiter Bürckel and the Bavarian Palatinate, 1933-40, in: Proceedings of the Leeds Philosophical & Literary Society: Literary & Historical Section 20 (1986), 271-291.
  • Harrison, E.D.R., The Nazi Dissolution of the Monasteries: A case-study, in: English Historical Review. 109 (1994), 323-355.
  • Helmreich, Ernst C., The Arrest and Freeing of the Protestant Bishops of Württemberg and Bavaria, September-October 1934, in: Central European History 2 (1969), 159-169.
  • Jucovy, Jon, The Bavarian Peasantry under National Socialist rule 1933-1945, PhD. New York 1985.
  • Kaplan, Thomas Pegelow, “In the Interest of the Volk…”: Nazi-German Paternity Suits and Racial Recategorization in the Munich Superior Courts, 1938–1945, in: Law & History Review. 29 (2011), 523-548.
  • Kater, Michael H., Composers of the Nazi Era: Eight Portraits, New York / Oxford 2000. [Hans Pfitzner, Richard Strauss, Carl Orff]
  • Kedar, Binyamin Zeev, A Bavarian historian reinvents himself: Karl Bosl and the Third Reich, Jerusalem 2011.
  • Kershaw, Ian, Popular opinion and political dissent in the Third Reich: Bavaria 1933-1945, Oxford u.a. 2002.
  • Kuller, Christiane, The demonstrations in support of the protestant provincial bishop Hans Meiser: A successful protest against the Nazi regime? In: Stoltzfus, Nathan – Maier-Katkin, Birgit (eds.), Protest in Hitler’s “national community”, Oxford 2016, 38-54.
  • Large, David Clay, Nazi games: The Olympics of 1936, New York etc. 2007.
  • Link, Fabian – Hornburg, Mark W., “He Who Owns the Trifels, Owns the Reich”: Nazi Medievalism and the Creation of the Volksgemeinschaft in the Palatinate, in: Central European History 49 (2016), 208-239.
  • Loiperdinger, Martin – Culbert, David, Leni Riefenstahl, the SA, and the Nazi Party Rally Films, Nuremberg 1933-1934: “Sieg des Glaubens” and “Triumph des Willens”, in: Historical Journal of Film, Radio & Television 8 (1988), 3-38.
  • Loval, Werner, We were Europeans. A personal history of a turbulent century, Jerusalem etc. 2010.
  • Marrus, Michael Robert, The Holocaust at Nuremberg, in: Yad Vashem Studies 26 (1998), 5-41.
  • Maurer, Hansjörg – Memming, Rolf B., A dissident Nazi. Hans-Jörg Maurer’s Würzburg diary, in: Wisconsin Magazine of History 50 (1967), 347-391.
  • McDonough, Frank, Sophie Scholl. The real story of the woman who defied Hitler, Stroud 2009.
  • McManus, John C., Hell before their very eyes: American soldiers liberate concentration camps in Germany, April 1945, Baltimore 2015. [Dachau]
  • Megargee, Geoffrey P. (ed.), The United States Holocaust Memorial Museum Encyclopedia of Camps and Ghettos, 1933-1945. Volume I: Early Camps, Youth Camps, and Concentration Camps and Subcamps under the SS-Business Administration Main Office (WVHA), Bloomington 2009.
  • Middlebrook, Martin, The Nuremberg raid, 30-31 March 1944, London 1973.
  • Middlebrook, Martin, The Schweinfurt-Regensburg mission. The American raids on 12 August 1943, Barnsley 2012.
  • Mitchell, Arthur, Hitler´s Mountain. The Führer, Obersalzberg and the American occupation of Berchtesgaden, Jefferson 2010.
  • Norton, Donald H., Karl Haushofer and the German Academy, 1925-1945, in: Central European History 1 (1968), 80-99.
  • Perekrestov, Elena, Alexander Schmorell: Saint of the German resistance, New York 2017.
  • Peters, Olaf (ed.), Degenerate Art. The attack on modern art in Nazi Germany, 1937, Munich / London / New York 2014.
  • Philpott, Colin, Relics of the Reich: The buildings the Nazis left behind, Barnsley 2016.
  • Rushton, Alan R., Charles Edward of Saxe-Coburg: Tthe German Red Cross and the plan to kill “unfit” citizens 1933-1945, Newcastle upon Tyne 2018.
  • Ryback, Timothy W., Hitler’s First Victims: The Quest for Justice, New York 2014.
  • Schlenker, Ines, Hitler’s Salon. The Große Deutsche Kunstausstellung at the Haus der Deutschen Kunst in Munich 1937-1944 (German linguistic and cultural studies 20), Oxford etc. 2007.
  • Schrafstetter, Susanna, Submergence into Illegality: Hidden Jews in Munich, 1941-1945, in: Ibid.Steinweis, Alan E. (eds.), The Germans and the Holocaust. Popular responses to the persecution and murder of the Jews, New York / Oxford 2016, 106-128.
  • Siefken, Hinrich (ed.), Die Weiße Rose. Student Resistance to National Socialism 1942-1943. Forschungsergebnisse und Erfahrungsberichte. A Nottingham Symposion (University of Nottingham monographs in the humanities 7), Nottingham 1991.
  • Smith, Dana, Female Musicians and the „Jewish” Music in the Jewish Kulturbund of Bavaria, 1934-38, in: Gregor, Neil – Irvine, Thomas (eds.), Dreams of Germany. Musical Imaginaries from the Concert Hall to the Dance Floor (Spektrum 18), New York / Oxford 2019, 123-144.
  • Spiller, Harry (ed.), Prisoners of Nazis. Accounts by American POWs in World War II, Jefferson / NC 1998. [Camps Memmingen, Moosburg, Nuremberg]
  • Szejnmann, Claus-Christian – Umbach, Maiken, Heimat, Region, and Empire. Spatial identities under national socialism, Basingstoke etc. 2012.
  • Thamer, Hans Ulrich, The Orchestration of the National Community. The Nuremberg Party Rallies of the NSDAP, in: Berghaus, Gunter (ed.), Fascism and theatre. Comparative studies on the aesthetics and politics of performance in Europe, 1925-1945, Providence etc. 1996, 172-190.
  • Thomas, Donald E. Jr., Nazi “Coordination” of Technology: The Case of the Bavarian Polytechnical Society, in: Technology and Culture 31 (1990), 251-264.
  • Vahrenkamp, Richard, Constructing the Autobahn Munich-Salzburg, in: Ibid. (ed.), The German Autobahn, Lohmar etc. 2010, 197-222.
  • Vistrits, Robert, Weekend in Munich. Art, Propaganda and Terror in the Third Reich, London 1995.
  • Waddy, Helena, Oberammergau in the Nazi era. The fate of a Catholic village in Hitler’s Germany, New York etc. 2010.
  • Walter, Lawrence D., “Young Priests” as Opponents: Factors Associated with Clerical Opposition to the Nazis in Bavaria, 1933, in: The Catholic Historical Review 65 (1979), 402-413.
  • Zeller, Guillaume, The priest barracks: Dachau, 1938-1945. Translated by Michael J. Miller, San Francisco 2017.

Bavaria after 1945

  • Ahonen, Pertti, The Curious Case of Werner Weinhold: Escape, Death, and Contested Legitimacy at the German-German Border, in: Central European History 45 (2012), 79-101.
  • Bauer, Yehuda, The Initial Organization of the Holocaust Survivors in Bavaria, in: Yad Vashem Studies on the European Jewish Catastrophe & Resistance 8 (1970), 127-157.
  • Bauridl, Birgit, From Grafenwoehr to ‘Graf’. A Transnational American Region in Bavaria, in: Lösch, Klaus – Paul, Heike – Zwingenberger, Meike (eds.), Critical Regionalism, Heidelberg 2016, 103-130.
  • Bauridl, Birgit M. – Gessner, Ingrid – Hebel, Udo J. (ed.), German-American Encounters in Bavaria and beyond, 1945-2015, Berlin etc. 2018.
  • Boehling, Rebecca L., A question of priorities. Democratic reforms and economic recovery in postwar Germany: Frankfurt, Munich, and Stuttgart under U.S. occupation 1945-1949 (Monographs in German history 2), Providence etc. 1996.
  • Brown, Antje C., EU Environmental Politics in Subnational Regions: The case of Scotland and Bavaria, Aldershot et al. 2001.
  • Burianek, Otto Bedrich, From liberator to guardian: The US Army and displaced persons in Munich 1945, PhD. Emory 1992.
  • Canoy, Jose Raymund, The discreet charm of the Police State: The Landpolizei and the Transformation of Bavaria 1945-1965 (Studies in Central European Histories 41), Leiden u.a. 2007.
  • Chaney, Sandra, Nature of the Miracle Years: Conservation in West Germany, 1945-1975 (Studies in German History 8), New York etc. 2008. [Chapter 7: Bavarian Forest National Park]
  • Cohen, Boaz, Representing the experiences of children in the Holocaust. Children’s survivor testimonies in “Fun Letsten Hurbn”, Munich, 1946-49, in: Patt, Avinoam – Berkowitz, Michael (eds.), “We are here”. New Approaches to Jewish Displaced Persons in Postwar Germany, Detroit 2010, 74-97.
  • Connor, Ian, The attitude of the ecclesiastical and political authorities in Bavaria to the refugee problem, 1945-50, PhD. Norwich 1983.
  • Connor, Ian, The Churches and the Refugee Problem in Bavaria 1945-49, in: Journal of Contemporary History 20 (1985), 399-421.
  • Connor, Ian, The Bavarian Government and the Refugee Problem 1945-50, in: European History Quarterly 16 (1986), 131-153.
  • Crago-Schneider, Kierra, Antisemitism or Competing Interests? An Examination of German and American Perceptions of Jewish Displaced Persons Active on the Black Market in Munich’s Möhlstrasse, in: Yad Vashem Studies 38 (2010), 167-194.
  • Cummings, Richard H., The Ether War: Hostile intelligence activities directed against Radio Free Europe, Radio Liberty, and the emigre community in Munich during the Cold War, in: Journal of Transatlantic Studies 6 (2008), 168-182.
  • Dastrup, Boyd L., Crusade in Nuremberg: Military occupation 1945-1949 (Contributions in military studies 47), Westport 1985.
  • Davis, Joel, Rebuilding the Soul: Churches and Religion in Bavaria, 1945-1960, PhD. University of Missouri 2007.
  • Elzey, Christopher Clark, Munich 1972: Sport, Politics and Tragedy, PhD. Purdue University 2004.
  • Farr, Ian – Ford, Graham, Bavaria’s “German Mission”: the CSU and the politics of regional identity, 1949-c. 1962, in: Lancaster, Bill et al. (ed.), An agenda for regional history, Newcastle 2007, 165-179.
  • Ford, Graham, Constructing a Regional Identity: The Christian Social Union and Bavaria’s Common Heritage, 1949-1962, in: Contemporary European History 16 (2007), 277-297.
  • Gaab, Jeffrey S., Justice Delayed: The restoration of justice in Bavaria under American occupation, 1945-1949 (Studies in modern European History 35), New York 1999.
  • Gehring, Hansjörg, Educational Reconstruction of Bavaria under U.S. Occupation, in: Paedagogica Historica 33 (1997), 247-263.
  • Gienow-Hecht, Jessica C., Transmission impossible: American journalism as cultural diplomacy in postwar Germany, 1945-1955 (Eisenhower Center studies on war and peace), Baton Rouge 1999.
  • Goschler, Constantin, The Attitute towards Jews in Bavaria after the Second World War, in: Leo Baeck Institute Year Book 36 (1991), 443-458.
  • Greene, Joshua, Justice at Dachau: The trials of an American prosecutor, New York 2003.
  • Gregor, Neill, “The Illusion of Remembrance”: The Karl Diehl affair and the memory of national socialism in Nuremberg, 1945-1999, in: The journal of modern history 75 (2003), 590-633.
  • Gregor, Neill, “Is he still alive, or long since dead?” Loss, absence and remembrance in Nuremberg, 1945-1956, in: German History 21 (2003), 183-203.
  • Gregor, Neill, Haunted City: Nuremberg and the Nazi past, New Haven etc. 2008.
  • Gunnlicks, Arthur B., The Länder and German Federalism, Manchester 2003.
  • Hagen, Joshua, Rebuilding the middle ages after the Second World War: The cultural politics of reconstruction in Rothenburg ob der Tauber, Germany, in: Journal of Historical Geography 31 (2005), 94-112.
  • Hagen, Joshua, Preservation, tourism and nationalism: The jewel of the German past (Heritage, culture and identity), Aldershot etc. 2006.
  • Hasenöhrl, Ute, Postwar Perceptions of German rivers. A Study of the Lech as energy source, nature preserve, and tourist attraction, in: Mauch, Christof (ed.), Rivers in History. Perspectives on waterways in Europe and North America (History of the Urban Environment), Pittsburgh 2008, 137-148.
  • Hepburn, Eve, Bavarian defence of the Heimat in Europe, in: Ibid. (ed.), Using Europe. Territorial Part Strategies in Multi-level System, Manchester 2010, 99-141.
  • Höschler, Christian, The IRO Children’s Village Bad Aibling. A refuge in the American Zone of Germany, 1948–1951, PhD. München 2017.
  • Holian, Anna Marta, Displacement and the post-war reconstruction of education. Displaced persons at the UNRRA University of Munich, 1945-1948, in: Contemporary European History 17 (2008), 167-195.
  • Holian, Anna Marta, Jews, foreigners, and the space of the postwar economy: The case of Munich’s Möhlstrasse, in: Lässig, Simone – Rürup, Miriam (eds.), Space and spatiality in modern German-Jewish history (New German historical perspectives 8), New York / Oxford 2017, 263-279.
  • Hudson, Walter M., The US Military Government and democratic reform and denazification in Bavaria 1945-1947, PhD. Fort Leavenworth 2001.
  • Hooper, Kathleen R., America houses – the buildings: Munich, in: Ibid. (ed.), Designing democracy:Re-education and the America Houses (1945-1961), Frankfurt am Main etc. 2014, 241-255.
  • Jardim, Tomasz, The Mauthausen Trial. American military justice in Germany, Cambridge / Mass. 2012.
  • Jasmand, Stephanie – Maennig, Wolfgang, Regional Income and Employment Effects of the 1972 Munich Summer Olympic Games, in: Regional Studies. Journal of the Regional Studies Association 42 (2008), 991-1003.
  • Johnson, Ian, A Mosque in Munich: Nazis, CIA and the Muslim Brotherhood in the West, Boston etc. 2010.
  • Ischinger, Wolfgang – Bunde, Tobias (eds.), Towards mutual security. Fifty years of Munich Security Conference, Göttingen 2014.
  • James, Peter, The Politics of Bavaria – an exception to the rule. The special position of the Free State of Bavaria in the New Germany, Aldershot etc. 1995.
  • Jaskot, Paul B., The Reich party rally grounds revisited: The Nazi past in postwar Nuremberg, in: Rosenfeld, Gavriel D. (ed.), Beyond Berlin. Twelve German cities confront the Nazi Past, Ann Arbor 2008, 143-162.
  • Jelinek, Yeshayahu A., Like an Oasis in the Desert: The Israel Consulate in Munich, 1948-1953, in: Studies in Zionism 9 (1988), 81-98.
  • Johnson, Jason B., Divided Village. The Cold War in the German borderlands (Routledge studies in modern European history 44), London / New York 2017.
  • Johnson, Jason B., “Wild and Fearsome Hours”: The First Year of US Occupation of a Bavarian County, 1945-1946, in: German Studies Review 41 (2018), 61-79. [County Hof]
  • Kalb, Martin, Youth and Juvenile Delinquency in Munich, 1942-1973, New York 2016.
  • Kauders, Anthony, Jews in the Christian Gaze: Munich’s Churches before and after Hitler, in: Patterns of Prejudice 34 (2000), 27-47.
  • Kauders, Anthony, Catholics, the Jews and Democratization in post-war Germany, Munich 1945-65, in: German History 18 (2000), 461-484.
  • Kauders, Anthony, Democratization and the Jews: Munich, 1945-1965 (Studies in Anti-Semitism), Lincoln 2004.
  • Klimke, Vivenne, A Sustianable Life: Wolfgang E. Burhenne and the development of environmental law, Hebertshausen 2015.
  • Large, David Clay, Munich 1972. Tragedy, terror, and triumph at the Olympic Games, Lanham etc. 2012.
  • Leder, Harald Thomas, Americans and German youth in Nuremberg 1945–1956. A study in politics and culture, PhD. Louisiana University 1997.
  • MacDonald, Sharon, Difficult heritage. Negotiating the Nazi past in Nuremberg and beyond, London u.a. 2009.
  • Malaniak, Bohdan Z., The Ukrainian Gymnasium Regensburg, Germany, 1945-1949 = Ukraïins’ka gimnazija Regensburg, Nimeččyna, 1945-1949, New Jersey 2008.
  • Mandell, Richard D., The Olympics of 1972. A Munich diary, Chapel Hill 1991.
  • Marcuse, Harald, Legacies of Dachau. The uses and abuses of a Concentration Camp, 1933-2001, Cambridge etc. 2001.
  • Melendy, Brenda D., Narratives, Festivals, and Reinvention: Defining the German Postwar Homeland in Waldkraiburg, in: Journal of Popular Culture 39 (2006), 1049-1076.
  • Merkl, Peter H., Small town and village in Bavaria. The passing of a way of life, New York u.a. 2012.
  • Michelmann, Hans J., Federalism and international relations. The role of subnational units, Oxford 1990.
  • Milosch, Mark Stephen, Modernizing Bavaria. The politics of Franz Josef Strauß and the CSU 1949-1969, New York u.a. 2006.
  • Modrey, Eva Maria, Architecture as a mode of self-representation at the Olympic Games in Rome (1960) and Munich (1972), in: European Review of History 15 (2008),. 691-706.
  • Monod, David, Internationalism, Regionalism, and National Culture: Music Control in Bavaria 1945-1948, in: Central European History 33 (2000), 339-368.
  • Ostow, Robin, Creating a Bavarian space for rapprochement: The Jewish Museum Munich, in: Lässig, Simone – Rürup, Miriam (eds.), Space and spatiality in modern German-Jewish history (New German historical perspectives 8), New York / Oxford 2017, 280-297.
  • Pollock, Emily Richmond, Pride of Place: The 1963 Rebuilding of the Munich Nationaltheater, in: Gregor, Neil – Irvine, Thomas (eds.), Dreams of Germany. Musical Imaginaries from the Concert Hall to the Dance Floor (Spektrum 18), New York / Oxford 2019, 145-168.
  • Puddington, Arch, Broadcasting Freedom. The Cold War triumph of Radio Free Europe and Radio Liberty, Lexington 2000.
  • Puff, Helmut, Miniature Monuments: Modeling German History (Media and Cultural Memory 17), Berlin etc. 2014 [Frankfurt, Munich, Schwetzingen, Heilbronn]
  • Radchenko, Yuri, From Staryi Uhryniv to Munich: The First Scholarly Biography of Stepan Bandera, in: Journal of Soviet and Post-Soviet Politics and Society 1 (2015), 429-458.
  • Rieder, Maximiliane, On the Boundary of Western Europe: The Marshall Plan and Economic Development in Bavaria, in: Bonoldi, Andrea – Leonardi, Andrea (eds.), Recovery and Development in the European Periphery (1945-1960), Bologna 2009, 281-310.
  • Rosenfeld, Gavriel D., Munich and Memory. Architecture, monuments, and the legacy of the Third Reich (Weimar and now 22), Berkeley 2000.
  • Ruisz, Dorottya, Social education as reeducation: The implementation of US-American policies in the English language classrooms of Bavaria (1945-1951), in: Gerund, Katharina et al. (eds.), Die amerikanische Reeducation-Politiknach 1945 (Histoire 55), Bielefeld 2015, 161-184.
  • Schiller, Kay, Death at the Munich Olympics, in: Confino, Alon et al. (eds.), Between Mass Death and Individual Loss: The Place of the Dead in Twentieth-Century Germany (Studies in German History 7), Oxford etc. 2008, 129-150.
  • Schiller, Kay, The 1972 Munich Olympics and the making of modern Germany (Weimar and now 42), Berkeley etc. 2010.
  • Searle, Alaric, The Tolsdorff Trials in Traunstein: Public and Judicial Attitudes to the Wehrmacht in the Federal Republic, 1954–60, in: German History 23 (2005), 50-78.
  • Seipp, Adam R., Refugee town: Germans, Americans, and the uprooted in rural West Germany 1945-52, in: Journal of Contemporary History 44 (2009), 675-695.
  • Seipp, Adam, R., Strangers in the Wild Place: Refugees, Americans, and a German town, 1945-1952, Bloomington etc. 2013. [DP-Camp Wildflecken]
  • Smyth, Craig Hugh, Repatriation of art from the collecting point in Munich after World War II. Background and beginnings, with reference especially to the Netherlands (Gerson lecture 3), Maarsen etc. 1988.
  • Stave, Bruce M. – Palmer, Michele (ed.), Witnesses to Nuremberg. An oral history of American participants at the war crimes trials, New York 1998.
  • Ulrich, Laura Christine, Roads to Europe: Heinrich Aigner and the Genesis of the European Court of Auditors, Luxembourg 2016.
  • Urban, Markus, Memorialization of Perpetrator Sites in Bavaria, in: Niven, William John (ed.), Memoralization in Germany since 1945, Basingstoke etc. 2010, 103-113.
  • Varon, Jeremy, The new life. Jewish students of postwar Germany, Detroit 2014.
  • Vogt, Siegfried Adolf, The Bayernpartei. A minor German Party in Transition, Diss. Washington State University 1972.
  • Wiecki, Stefan, The Denazification of Munich University, 1945-1948, in: Kraus, Elisabeth (ed.), Die Universität München im Dritten Reich (Beiträge zur Geschichte der Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität München 4), München 2008, 519-569.
  • Wiecki, Stefan, Professors in Purgatory: Denazification of Munich University, 1945-1955, PhD. Brandeis University 2009.
  • Woolridge, Joyce, ‘They shall grow not old’: Mourning, Memory and the Munich Air Disaster of 1958, in: Manchester Region History Review 20 (2009), 111-132.

Biographies

  • Adams, Marilyn Mc Cord, William Ockham, 2 Vol., Notre Dame/Ind. 1987.
  • Adams, Tracy, The life and afterlife of Isabeau of Bavaria, Baltimore 2010.
  • Bier, Justus, Tilman Riemenschneider. His Life and Work, Lexington 1982.
  • Brock, William H., Justus von Liebig. The Chemical Gatekeeper, Cambridge 1997.
  • Brook-Shepherd, Gordon, Uncrowned Emperor: The life and times of Otto von Habsburg, London etc. 2003.
  • Boyden, Matthew, Richard Strauss, Boston 1999.
  • Bytwerk, Randall L., Julius Streicher. The Man Who Persuaded a Nation to Hate Jews, New York 2001 (revised edition).
  • Carsten, F. L., Georg von Vollmar. A Bavarian Social Democrat, in: Journal of Contemporary History 25 (1990), 317-335.
  • Coady, Mary Frances, With bound hands: A Jesuit in Nazi Germany. The life and selected prison letters of Alfred Delp, Chicago 2003.
  • Conradi, Peter, Hitlers Piano Player. The Rise and Fall of Ernst Hanfstaengl, Confidant of Hitler, Ally of FDR, New York 2004.
  • Coppa, Frank D., The Life and Pontificate of Pope Pius XII – between history and controversy, Washington D.C. 2013.
  • Friedel, Helmut – Hoberg, Annegret (eds.), Vasily Kandinsky, München etc. 2008.
  • Furness, Raymond, Richard Wagner, London 2013.
  • Geiger, Erika, The Life, Work, and Influence of Wilhelm Loehe 1808-1872, translated by Wolf-Dietrich Knappe, St. Loius 2010.
  • Gilliam, Bryan, The life of Richard Strauss, Cambridge etc. 2001.
  • Görtemaker, Heike B., Eva Braun: Life with Hitler, New York 2011.
  • Hamann, Brigitte, The Reluctant Empress. A Biography of Elisabeth of Austria, transl. by Ruth Hein, New York 1986.
  • Hamann, Brigitte, Winifred Wagner: A Life at the Heart of Hitler’s Bayreuth, San Diego 2006.
  • Hancock, Eleanor, Ernst Röhm. Hitler´s SA Chief of Staff, New York 2008.
  • Hilmes, Oliver, Cosima Wagner. The Lady of Bayreuth, transl. by Stuart Spencer, New Haven 2010.
  • Holden, Raymond, Richard Strauss. A musical life, New Haven etc. 2011.
  • Hutchison, Jane Campbell, Albrecht Dürer. A Biography, Princeton 1990.
  • Jackson, Myles W., Spectrum of belief. Joseph von Fraunhofer and the craft of precision optics, Cambridge/Mass. 2000.
  • Jordan, Karl, Henry the Lion. A Biography, Oxford 1986.
  • Kershaw, Ian, Hitler, London 2009.
  • Kitchen, Martin, Kaspar Hauser: Europe’s child, Basingstoke etc. 2001.
  • Krieg, Robert A., Romano Guardini. A Precursor of Vatican II, Notre Dame/Indiana 1997.
  • Godthardt, Frank, The Life of Marsilius of Padua, in: Moreno-Riaño, Gerson – Nederman, Cary J. (eds.), A Companion to Marsilius of Padua, Leiden etc. 2012, 13-56.
  • Larson, Wanda Z., Elisabeth. A Biography: From Bavarian Princess to Queen of the Belgians, San Francisco etc. 1997.
  • Longerich, Peter, Heinrich Himmler. A life, Oxford 2012.
  • McIntosh, Christopher, The Swan King: Ludwig II of Bavaria, London u.a. 2012.
  • Mierzejewski, Alfred C., Ludwig Erhard. A Biography, Chapel Hill 2004.
  • Oetgen, Jerome, An American Abbot. Boniface Wimmer, O.S.B., 1809-1887, Washington DC 1997.
  • Pfister, Peter (ed.), Eugenio Pacelli – Pius XII (1876-1958): In the view of scholarship, Regensburg 2012.
  • Prater, Donald A., Thomas Mann. A Life, Oxford etc. 1995.
  • Seymour, Bruce, Lola Montez. A life, New Haven etc. 1996.
  • Sheehan, James J., The Career of Lujo Brentano. A Study of Liberalism and Social Reform in Imperial Germany, Chicago u.a. 1966.
  • Smith, Jeffrey, Dürer, London 2012.
  • Sparrow, W. J., Knight of the white eagle. A Biography of Sir Benjamin Thompson, Count Rumford (1753-1814), London 1964.
  • Steinmetz, Greg, The richest man who ever lived: The life and times of Jacob Fugger, New York etc. 2015.
  • Strauss, Gerald, Historian in an age of crisis. The life and work of Johannes Aventinus 1477-1534, Cambridge 1963.
  • Tanner, Michael, Wagner, Princeton 1996.
  • Tyson, Joseph Howard, Hitler´s Mentor: Dietrich Eckardt, his life, time and milieu, New York 2008.
  • Van den Heuvel, Jon, A German Life in the Age of Revolution: Joseph Görres, 1776-1848, Washington D.C. 2001.
  • Ventresca, Robert A., Soldier of Christ. The life of Pope Pius XII, Cambridge/Mass. 2013.
  • Wolf, Norbert, Dürer, München etc. 2010.

 

Institutions / Museums / Exhibitions / Historic Sites

(Mininum 30 pages)

  • Altmann, Lothar, Bayerische Staatskanzlei, English Edition, München 2006.
  • Altmann, Lothar, The Maximilianeum, Munich, Regensburg 2010.
  • Altmann, Lothar, Chapel of Grace, Altötting, Regensburg 2013.
  • Altmann, Lothar, St. Peter’s, Munich, Regensburg 2015.
  • Altmann, Lothar, The Benedictine Abbey of Weltenburg. History and Art, Regensburg 2019.
  • Bachmann, Erich – Miller, Albrecht, Imperial Castle Nuremberg. Official Guide, München 1994.
  • Bauer, Richard – Dischinger, Gabriele, The Asam Church of St. John Nepomucene, Regensburg 2019.
  • Betz, Karl-Heinz, The Collegiate Church of Our Lady at the Alte Kapelle, Regensburg 2016.
  • Bomhard, Peter von – Benker, Sigmund, Frauenchiemsee, Abbey Church, Regensburg 2003.
  • Brugger, Walter, Church of the Holy Spirit, Munich, Regensburg 2015.
  • Dischinger, Gabriele – Vollmer, Eva Christina, Wessobrunn, Regensburg 2003.
  • Distel, Barbara et al. (eds.), The Dachau Concentration Camp 1933 to 1945: Text and photo documents from the exhibition. Catalogue for the Exhibition “The Dachau Concentration Camp 1933-1945”, München 2005.
  • Emmert, Jürgen, Neumünster, Würzburg, Regensburg 2014.
  • Filchner, Gerhard, Deutsches Museum, Flugwerft Schleissheim, Air and Space Museum: A guide through the history and exhibition of the Flugwerft Schleissheim museum, München 2005.
  • Fleckenstein, Jutta – Purin, Bernhard, Jüdisches Museum München: Jewish Museum Munich, München etc. 2007.
  • Friedel, Helmut (ed.), The Blue Rider in the Lenbachhaus, Munich, München etc. 2013.
  • Fugger von Glött, Ulrich, The Fuggerei. The oldest social settlement in the world, Augsburg 2004.
  • Grammbitter, Ulrike – Lauterbach, Iris, NSDAP Centre Munich, Berlin / München 2015.
  • Große, Peggy – Rieger, Georg, St. Martha’s Reformed Church, Nuremberg, Regensburg 2019.
  • Heckl, Wolfgang M., Technology in a changing world: The collections of the Deutsches Museum, München 2010.
  • Hanemann, Regina, The Bamberg Historical Museum, Regensburg 2019.
  • Hojer, Gerhard – Götz, Ernst, Nymphenburg: Palace, Park and Pavilions. Official Guide, München 2009.
  • Hubel, Achim, St. Peter’s Cathedral, Regensburg, Regensburg 2010.
  • Kaiser, Alfred, St. Cajetan’s Theatine Church Munich, Regensburg 2013.
  • Keim, Helmut – Lobenhofer-Hirschbold, Franziska, Guide Freilichtmuseum Glentleiten, Großweil 2004.
  • Kießling, Hermann – Lohrmann, Ulrich, Town Hall, Augsburg, Regensburg 2000.
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