The Basel Mission. children-of-bangalore.com, abgerufen am 10. August 2012: „Having set up may Churches in Europe, the financial position of the Basel Mission Society decided to set up Institutions in areas of India that had not experienced Protestant Missionaries. So on 12th February 1834, three Missionaries were sent to India to establish Basel Mission Stations. They became the first Continental Society other than the Tranqueba Mission to take up work in India. The three Missionaries were Johan Christopher Lehner, Christian Lenhard Greiner, and Samuel Hebich who set out on 31st March 1834 and landed in Calicut on 21 August 1834.“
google.co.in
books.google.co.in
Gerald H. Anderson: Biographical Dictionary of Christian Missions. Wm. B. Eerdmans Publishing, 1999, ISBN 0-8028-4680-7 (google.co.in).
Robert Young: Modern Missions: Their Trials and Triumphs. Ayer Publishing, 1972, ISBN 0-8369-9153-2, S.54–56 (google.co.in).
Reinhard Wendt (Hrsg.): An Indian to the Indians?: On the Initial Failure and the Posthumous Success of the Missionary Ferdinand Kittel (1832-1903). Otto Harrassowitz Verlag, 2006, ISBN 3-447-05161-2, S.133–140 (google.co.in).
Judith Becker: Conversio im Wandel (siehe unter „Quellen“), S. 155, Fußnote 129, dort zitiert: Gundert und Mögling (?): „Samuel Hebich“, S. 125f, Samuel Hebich: Fünfzehn Vorträge, S. 82 und Samuel Hebich: Gotteskraft, die selig macht, Evangelischer Missionsverlag, Stuttgart 1934, S. 40 und S. 48f, abrufbar unter Google Books
Samuel Hebich: Fünfzehn Vorträge, C. Bunz (Johs. Josenhaus), W. Stroh im Bibelhaus, Stuttgart 1861 und im Missionshaus, Basel 1861, Siebenter Vortrag, S. 82, abrufbar unter [1]