John Brewer, Eckhart Hellmuth, German Historical Institute in London (1999).Rethinking Leviathan: The Eighteenth-Century State in Britain and Germany (页面存档备份,存于互联网档案馆), Oxford University Press. p.64. ISBN 0-19-920189-7. John Childs wrote: “Between 1706 and 1707, 10,000 Hessians served as a corps in Eugene of Savoy's army in Italy before moving to the Spanish Netherlands in 1708. In 1714, 6000 Hessians were rented to Sweden for its war with Russia whilst 12,000 Hessians were hired by George I of Great Britain in 1715 to combat the Jacobite Rebellion. ... In the midst of the War of the Austrian Succession in 1744, 6,000 Hessians were fighting with the British army in Flanders whilst another 6,000 were in the Bavarian army. By 1762, 24,000 Hessians were serving with Ferdinand of Brunswick's army in Germany.”
Rodney Atwood. The Hessians. Cambridge University Press. 2002: 199 [2013-08-25]. (原始内容存档于2016-05-16).
John Brewer, Eckhart Hellmuth, German Historical Institute in London (1999).Rethinking Leviathan: The Eighteenth-Century State in Britain and Germany (页面存档备份,存于互联网档案馆), Oxford University Press. p.64. ISBN 0-19-920189-7. John Childs wrote: “Between 1706 and 1707, 10,000 Hessians served as a corps in Eugene of Savoy's army in Italy before moving to the Spanish Netherlands in 1708. In 1714, 6000 Hessians were rented to Sweden for its war with Russia whilst 12,000 Hessians were hired by George I of Great Britain in 1715 to combat the Jacobite Rebellion. ... In the midst of the War of the Austrian Succession in 1744, 6,000 Hessians were fighting with the British army in Flanders whilst another 6,000 were in the Bavarian army. By 1762, 24,000 Hessians were serving with Ferdinand of Brunswick's army in Germany.”