Cooke, A. (1625). Pope Joane. A dialogue betweene a protestant and a papist. Manifestly proving, that a woman called Joane, was Pope of Rome: Against the surmises and objections made to the contrarie, by Robert Bellarmine and Caesar Baronius Cardinals Florimondus Raemondus, N.D. and other popish writers, impudently denying the same/By Alexander Cooke. J. Haviland for W. Garrat.
Chicago Style (17th ed.) CitationCooke, Alexander. Pope Joane. A Dialogue Betweene a Protestant and a Papist. Manifestly Proving, That a Woman Called Joane, Was Pope of Rome: Against the Surmises and Objections Made to the Contrarie, by Robert Bellarmine and Caesar Baronius Cardinals Florimondus Raemondus, N.D. and Other Popish Writers, Impudently Denying the Same/By Alexander Cooke. London: J. Haviland for W. Garrat, 1625.
MLA (9th ed.) CitationCooke, Alexander. Pope Joane. A Dialogue Betweene a Protestant and a Papist. Manifestly Proving, That a Woman Called Joane, Was Pope of Rome: Against the Surmises and Objections Made to the Contrarie, by Robert Bellarmine and Caesar Baronius Cardinals Florimondus Raemondus, N.D. and Other Popish Writers, Impudently Denying the Same/By Alexander Cooke. J. Haviland for W. Garrat, 1625.