APA (7th ed.) Citation

Baldwin, W. (1564). A treatyce of moral philosophy: Containing the sayinges of the wise. Wherin you maye see the worthye and pithye sayinges of ye philosophers, emperors, kinges, and oratours, of their liues, their aunswers, of what lignage they came of, and of what cou[n]trey they were, whose worthy and notable preseptes, counsailes parables and semblables doth hereafter folow: first gathered and englished by Willia[m] Baldwin, after that, twise augmented by Thomas Paulfreyman, one of the gentle men of the Queenes maiesties chaple, [and] now once againe enlarged by the first aucthor. Cum priulegio. [In Fleetestrete within Temple barre, at the signe of the hande and Starre, by Rycharde Tottill].

Chicago Style (17th ed.) Citation

Baldwin, William. A Treatyce of Moral Philosophy: Containing the Sayinges of the Wise. Wherin You Maye See the Worthye and Pithye Sayinges of Ye Philosophers, Emperors, Kinges, and Oratours, of Their Liues, Their Aunswers, of What Lignage They Came of, and of What Cou[n]trey They Were, Whose Worthy and Notable Preseptes, Counsailes Parables and Semblables Doth Hereafter Folow: First Gathered and Englished by Willia[m] Baldwin, After That, Twise Augmented by Thomas Paulfreyman, One of the Gentle Men of the Queenes Maiesties Chaple, [and] Now Once Againe Enlarged by the First Aucthor. Cum Priulegio. S.l: [In Fleetestrete within Temple barre, at the signe of the hande and Starre, by Rycharde Tottill], 1564.

MLA (9th ed.) Citation

Baldwin, William. A Treatyce of Moral Philosophy: Containing the Sayinges of the Wise. Wherin You Maye See the Worthye and Pithye Sayinges of Ye Philosophers, Emperors, Kinges, and Oratours, of Their Liues, Their Aunswers, of What Lignage They Came of, and of What Cou[n]trey They Were, Whose Worthy and Notable Preseptes, Counsailes Parables and Semblables Doth Hereafter Folow: First Gathered and Englished by Willia[m] Baldwin, After That, Twise Augmented by Thomas Paulfreyman, One of the Gentle Men of the Queenes Maiesties Chaple, [and] Now Once Againe Enlarged by the First Aucthor. Cum Priulegio. [In Fleetestrete within Temple barre, at the signe of the hande and Starre, by Rycharde Tottill], 1564.

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