Johannes XXI. Papst. (1558). The treasuri of helth: Contaynyng many profytable medicines, gathered out of Hipocratis, Galen, and Avicen by Petrus Hyspanus and tra[n]slated into Englyshe by Humfrey Lloyd, who hath added therunto the causes and sygnes of euery dysease, with the aphorismes of Hipocrates and Jacobus de Partibus redacted to a certayne order accordinge to the me[m]bres of mans bodys, and a compendiouse table conteyning the purgyng [and] confortatiue medicines, wyth the exposition of certayne names and weightes in this boke contayned wyth an Epistle of Diocles vnto King Antigonus. [In Saynt Martyns Paryshe in the vyntre, vppon the thre Crane wharfs by Willyam Coplande].
Chicago Style (17th ed.) CitationJohannes XXI. Papst. The Treasuri of Helth: Contaynyng Many Profytable Medicines, Gathered Out of Hipocratis, Galen, and Avicen by Petrus Hyspanus and Tra[n]slated into Englyshe by Humfrey Lloyd, Who Hath Added Therunto the Causes and Sygnes of Euery Dysease, with the Aphorismes of Hipocrates and Jacobus De Partibus Redacted to a Certayne Order Accordinge to the Me[m]bres of Mans Bodys, and a Compendiouse Table Conteyning the Purgyng [and] Confortatiue Medicines, Wyth the Exposition of Certayne Names and Weightes in This Boke Contayned Wyth an Epistle of Diocles Vnto King Antigonus. S.l: [In Saynt Martyns Paryshe in the vyntre, vppon the thre Crane wharfs by Willyam Coplande], 1558.
MLA (9th ed.) CitationJohannes XXI. Papst. The Treasuri of Helth: Contaynyng Many Profytable Medicines, Gathered Out of Hipocratis, Galen, and Avicen by Petrus Hyspanus and Tra[n]slated into Englyshe by Humfrey Lloyd, Who Hath Added Therunto the Causes and Sygnes of Euery Dysease, with the Aphorismes of Hipocrates and Jacobus De Partibus Redacted to a Certayne Order Accordinge to the Me[m]bres of Mans Bodys, and a Compendiouse Table Conteyning the Purgyng [and] Confortatiue Medicines, Wyth the Exposition of Certayne Names and Weightes in This Boke Contayned Wyth an Epistle of Diocles Vnto King Antigonus. [In Saynt Martyns Paryshe in the vyntre, vppon the thre Crane wharfs by Willyam Coplande], 1558.