Krauss, Sagen und Märchen der Südslaven, 1883, i. 385–388, “Der Vilaberg.” Summarized by Dutz, p. 11.
Servian VI.
Krauss, work cited, i. 114–119. “Fuhrmann Tueguts Himmelswagen.” From the manuscript collection of Valjavec. Summarized by Dutz, p. 18, note 2.
Bohemian.[2]
Waldau, Böhmisches Märchenbuch, 1860, pp. 213–241. Mentioned by Köhler, Or. und Occ. ii. 329, and by Hippe, p. 146. Summarized by the former, Or. und Occ. iii. 97 f.
Polish.
K. W. Wójcicki, Klechdy, Starożytne podania i powieści ludowe, 2nd ed., Warsaw, 1851. Translated into German by F. H. Lewestam, Polnische Volkssagen und Märchen, 1839, pp. 130 ff; into English by A. H. Wratislaw, Sixty Folk-Tales from exclusively Slavonic Sources, 1889, pp. 121 ff.; and into French by Louis Leger, Recueil de contes populaires slaves, 1882, pp. 119 ff. Summarized by Köhler, Germania, iii. 200 f., and by Hippe, pp. 146 f. See also Sepp, p. 684, Dutz, p. 11, Groome, Gypsy Folk-Tales, p. 3, note, and Arivau, Folk-Lore de Proaza, 1886, p. 205.
Bulgarian.
Lydia Schischmánoff, Légendes religieuses bulgares, 1896, no. 77, pp. 202–209,[3] “Le berger, son fils, et l’archange.”
Lithuanian I.