Czechia

Brno - Turany:

Statue of Sv. Kajetan with Christ crucified in a Turany cemetery. 

Brno-Veseli Nad Moravou

A niche built in homage to St. Cajetan Name in the South-Moravian region District of Hodonin Village Veselí nad Morava listed since 1958 as a protected heritage monument.

Cesky Krumlov:

In the square of the town there is a Baroque column with the statue of Our Lady on top. Around the column are various statues of Saints and in one of the base niches there is the one of Heilige Kajetan. 

Lower Moravia:

Among the backyards of houses in a village, a statue of Heilige Kajetan receiving the cross from Christ Himself.

Prague:

Right at the foot of the prominent and historical castle of Prague is the church of Our Lady of Perpetual help and Sveti Kajetan which was built between 1691 and 1717.

An oil painting of the Extasy of Sv.Kajetan by Karel Skreta painted in 1665.

On Charles bridge: Prague's most celebrated structure: One of 22 statues, Sv.Kajetan here stands in front of a column of cherubs while holding a heart. Behind the statue, a triangle symbolizes the Holy Trinity. The statues were put on the bridge in the period 1707-14. The Jesuits who master-minded the plan for the decoration of the bridge, thought that saints linked to the national traditions or to the Counter Reformation period, were more suited to their efforts to re-catholicize Bohemia, than the twelve Apostles.

Charles Bridge Museum: Sculptor Ferdinand Brokoff's 'bozzetto' drawing of how the column and statue of St Kajetan was going to be done. Inscription on the book in the Saint's hands is the quotation from Matthew Ch6: Seek first the kingdom of God and his righteousness and all these things shall be added unto you. On a pedestal is inscribed: Saint Kajetan Thiene founder of the order of Clerks Regular. 

Stadlec:
In a grove by the road from Stadlec town to the Stadlec chain bridge, there is a small niche dedicated to Sveti Kajetan.

Stare-Oetting:

Chapel of the Visitation of the Virgin Mary and St. Cajetan. This somewhat neglected copy of the chapel in Staré Oetting in Austria used to stand on land near Kajetánka, today only a part of the chapel is still standing, in 1783 it was abolished together with the monastery in Kajetánka and subsequently partially demolished. The part remaining today is the circular building, which transitions to a polygon on the upper floor. The barricaded entrance now leads into the fenced-in area of the neighbouring property. The vaulted lower area of the chapel is clogged with garbage. it belonged to the Kajetánka monastery of the Order of Theatins (popularly known as Kajetáns), which Bernard Martinic had built here in 1666 on the site of the original courtyard.