Gother, J. (1686). A papist mis-represented and represented: Or, A two-fold character of popery. The one containing a sum of the supestitions [sic], idolatries, cruelties, treacheries, and wicked principles of that popery which hath disturb'd this nation above an hundred and fifty years; fill'd it with fears & jealousies, and deserves the hatred of all good Christians. The other laying open that popery which the papists own and profess; with the chief articles of their faith, and some of the principal grounds and reasons, which hold them in that religion. By J.L. To which is annexed, Roman-Catholick principles, in reference to God and the King. The Society of Stationers.
Chicago Style (17th ed.) CitationGother, John. A Papist Mis-represented and Represented: Or, A Two-fold Character of Popery. The One Containing a Sum of the Supestitions [sic], Idolatries, Cruelties, Treacheries, and Wicked Principles of That Popery Which Hath Disturb'd This Nation Above an Hundred and Fifty Years; Fill'd It with Fears & Jealousies, and Deserves the Hatred of All Good Christians. The Other Laying Open That Popery Which the Papists Own and Profess; with the Chief Articles of Their Faith, and Some of the Principal Grounds and Reasons, Which Hold Them in That Religion. By J.L. To Which Is Annexed, Roman-Catholick Principles, in Reference to God and the King. Dublin: The Society of Stationers, 1686.
MLA (9th ed.) CitationGother, John. A Papist Mis-represented and Represented: Or, A Two-fold Character of Popery. The One Containing a Sum of the Supestitions [sic], Idolatries, Cruelties, Treacheries, and Wicked Principles of That Popery Which Hath Disturb'd This Nation Above an Hundred and Fifty Years; Fill'd It with Fears & Jealousies, and Deserves the Hatred of All Good Christians. The Other Laying Open That Popery Which the Papists Own and Profess; with the Chief Articles of Their Faith, and Some of the Principal Grounds and Reasons, Which Hold Them in That Religion. By J.L. To Which Is Annexed, Roman-Catholick Principles, in Reference to God and the King. The Society of Stationers, 1686.