APA (7th ed.) Citation

Caldwell, J. (1779). An enquiry how far the restrictions laid upon the trade of Ireland, by British acts of Parliament, are a benefit or disadvantage to the British dominions in general, and to England in particular, for whose separate advantage they were intended: With an address to the gentlemen concerned in the woollen commerce of Great Britain, and particularly to the members of Parliament .. Printed by R. Marchbank, for the Company of Booksellers.

Chicago Style (17th ed.) Citation

Caldwell, James. An Enquiry How Far the Restrictions Laid upon the Trade of Ireland, by British Acts of Parliament, Are a Benefit or Disadvantage to the British Dominions in General, and to England in Particular, for Whose Separate Advantage They Were Intended: With an Address to the Gentlemen Concerned in the Woollen Commerce of Great Britain, and Particularly to the Members of Parliament .. Dublin: Printed by R. Marchbank, for the Company of Booksellers, 1779.

MLA (9th ed.) Citation

Caldwell, James. An Enquiry How Far the Restrictions Laid upon the Trade of Ireland, by British Acts of Parliament, Are a Benefit or Disadvantage to the British Dominions in General, and to England in Particular, for Whose Separate Advantage They Were Intended: With an Address to the Gentlemen Concerned in the Woollen Commerce of Great Britain, and Particularly to the Members of Parliament .. Printed by R. Marchbank, for the Company of Booksellers, 1779.

Warning: These citations may not always be 100% accurate.