The pre-war history of Fassberg air base includes a number of interesting details and well-known names. From the spring of 1933, not only airfields and planes were built for the German Air Force, numerous training centres were also created, and in the first years, because of the Versailles Treaty, they were called by names that veiled their real purpose.[3]
Matthias Blazek: Die geheime Großbaustelle in der Heide – Faßberg und sein Fliegerhorst 1933–2013. Ibidem, Stuttgart 2013, ISBN978-3-95538-017-5.
Michael Ende, Peter Müller, Urs Müller: Celle – Stadt und Landkreis. Medien-Verlag Schubert, Hamburg 2007, ISBN978-3-937843-11-7.
Christoph M. Glombek: Chronik der Gemeinde Faßberg mit den Ortschaften Müden/Örtze, Poitzen und Schmarbeck. Faßberg 2002.
Hans Stärk: Geschichte von Faßberg. Faßberg 1971.
Faßberg – Luft- und Raumfahrt in der Heide. Magazine for the AeroSpaceDay Faßberg, edited by the municipality of Faßberg, Faßberg 2013, ISBN978-3-00-042877-7.
^Huschke, Wolfgang J.: The Candy Bombers: The Berlin Airlift, 1948/49, The Technical Conditions and Their Successful Transformation, 2"d improved and extended edition, Berliner Wissenschafts-Verlag, Berlin 2008, ISBN978-3-8305-2677-3, p. 165.
^"Monatsauswertung". sklima.de (in German). SKlima. Retrieved 24 October 2024.