^ abcdefghiAndrzej Betlej. "Jesuits Architecture in Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth in 1564-1772". [In:] La Arquitectura Jesuítica. ed. María Isabel Álvaro. Saragossa. 2011. pp. 292, 294, 298.
^ abAdam Miłobędzki. Polish architecture of sec. al XVII-lea. Vol. 1. PWN. 1980. pp. 495, 499.
^ abFrancis Dvornik. The Slavs in European History and Civilization. Rutgers University Press. 1962. p. 306.
^Edmund Cieślak, Czesław Biernat. History of Gdańsk. Fundacja Biblioteki Gdańskiej. 1995. p. 173.
^Gary B. Cohen, Franz A. J. Szabo. Embodiments of Power: Building Baroque Cities in Europe. Berghahn Books. 2008. p. 103.
^ abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyzaaabacadpl Lewicki Jakub. Między tradycją a nowoczesnością: architektura Lwowa lat 1893-1918. Neriton. 2005.
^Stefan Muthesius. Art, architecture and design in Poland, 966-1990: an introduction. K.R. Langewiesche Nachfolger, H. Köster Verlagsbuchhandlung. 1994. p. 56.
^ abcdefElżbieta Waszczyszyn. "The sec. al XIX-lea Medical Clinic of Collegium of the Jagiellonian University in Kraków. An outline of conservation problems in the light of requirements of a modern University Hospital." Conservation News. 27/2010. p. 54.
^Dominic Lieven. The Cambridge History of Russia: Volume 2, Imperial Russia, 1689-1917. Cambridge University Press. 2006. p. 182.
^Ludwik Bazylow. Historia Rosji. Vol. 1. PWN. 1985. p. 243.
^Architect of the King's Theatre in London. Cerita Stanley-Little. The Great Lablache: Nineteenth Century Operatic Superstar His Life and His Times. Xlibris Corporation. 2009. p. 111.
^Manana Doijašvili. The Vano Saradjishvili Tbilisi State Conservatoire, 1917-2007. Nova Publishers. 2008. p. 87.
^Karolina Grodziska, Bogusław Krasnowolski. Cracow: the heritage of centuries. Historical Museum of the City of Cracow. 2007. p. 43.
^ abcMarkian Prokopovych. Habsburg Lemberg: Architecture, Public Space, and Politics in the Galician Capital, 1772-1914. Purdue University Press. 2009. pp. 157, 179.
^Adenrele A. Awotona. Reconstruction after disaster: issues and practices. Ashgate Publishing. 1997. p. 75.
^ abcd"Medieval socialist artifacts. Architecture and discourses of national identity in provincial Poland (1945-1960)". José M. Faraldo. Europe, Nationalism, Communism: Essays on Poland. Peter Lang. 2008. pp. 23-24, 28.
^Martin Kohlrausch. "'Houses of Glass'. Modern Architecture and the idea of Community in Poland". [In:] Rajesh Heyninckx, Tom Avermaete. Making a New World: Architecture & Communities in Interwar Europe. Leuven University Press. 2012. p. 99.
^David Crowley. National Style and Nation-State: Design in Poland from the Vernacular Revival to the International Style. Manchester University Press. 1992. p. 106.
^Juliusz A. Chrościcki, Andrzej Rottermund. Atlas of Warsaw's Architecture. Arkady. 1978. p. 61.
^ abAdolf K. Placzek. Macmillan Encyclopedia of Architects Vol. 2. Free Press. 1982. p. 597.
^ abHarry Francis Mallgrave. Modern Architectural Theory: A Historical Survey, 1673-1968. Cambridge University Press. 2005. pp. 267, 339.
^Krzysztof Stefanski. "Polish Ecclesiastical Architecture of the early 20th New Form and National Obligations". Centropa: A Journal of Central European Architecture and Related Arts. 2003. p. 242.
^Hugo Segawa. Architecture of Brazil. Springer. 2013. pp. 24, 31.
^Wojciech G. Leśnikowski, Vladimír Šlapeta. East European modernism: architecture in Czechoslovakia, Hungary, and Poland between the wars 1919-1939. Rizzoli. 1996. pp. 199, 217.
^ abEve Blau, Monika Platzer. Shaping the great city: modern architecture in Central Europe, 1890-1937. Prestel. 1999. p. 153.