Bardia again changed hands in June 1942, being re-occupied by Axis forces for a third time, but was abandoned without contest in November following the Allied victory at El Alamein.[10]
Bardia is the location of the Bardia Mural, finished in 1942.[13]
^Hans Werner Neulen: Feldgrau in Jerusalem. 2. Aufl., Universitas, München 2002, S. 100 ff., ISBN3-8004-1437-6.
^Collier, Richard (1977) The War in the Desert Time-Life Books, Alexandria, Virginia, p. 29, ISBN0-7835-5721-3 and Time-Life Books (1990) Afrikakorps Time-Life Books, Alexandria, Virginia, p. 15, ISBN0-8094-6983-9
^ ab"Battle of Bardia". Australian Military Units. Australian War Memorial. Retrieved 28 December 2014.
^Personal account of battle by Ron Myburgh's (as yet unpublished) memoirs.
^Loughman, R. J. M. (1963). "Chapter 9: The Capture of Bardia". Divisional Cavalry. Wellington, New Zealand: War History Branch, New Zealand Department of Internal Affairs. Archived from the original on 2012-02-13.
Agar-Hamilton, J. A. I.; Turner, L. C. F. (1957). The Sidi Rezegh Battles, 1941. Cape Town: Oxford University Press.
Stevens, William George (Major General) (1962). Bardia to Enfidaville. Official history of New Zealand in the Second World War, 1939-45. Wellington, New Zealand: War History Branch, New Zealand Department of Internal Affairs. OCLC4377202. - history of New Zealand troops in North Africa in World War II