APA (7th ed.) Citation

Gipps, T. (1699). Tentamen novum continuatum. Or, An answer to Mr Owen's Plea and defense. Wherein Bishop Pearson's chronology about the time of St. Paul's constituting Timothy Bishop of Ephesus, and Titus of Crete, is confirm'd; the second epistle to Timothy demonstrated to have been written in the apostle's latter imprisonment at Rome; and all Mr. Owen's arguments drawn from antiquity for Presbyterian parity and ordination by presbyters, are overthrown. Herein is more particularly prov'd, that the Church of England, ever since the Reformation, believ'd the divine right of bishops. By Thomas Gipps, rector of Bury in Lancashire. printed by Tho. Warren, for Ephraim Johnson bookseller in Manchester.

Chicago Style (17th ed.) Citation

Gipps, Thomas. Tentamen Novum Continuatum. Or, An Answer to Mr Owen's Plea and Defense. Wherein Bishop Pearson's Chronology About the Time of St. Paul's Constituting Timothy Bishop of Ephesus, and Titus of Crete, Is Confirm'd; the Second Epistle to Timothy Demonstrated to Have Been Written in the Apostle's Latter Imprisonment at Rome; and All Mr. Owen's Arguments Drawn from Antiquity for Presbyterian Parity and Ordination by Presbyters, Are Overthrown. Herein Is More Particularly Prov'd, That the Church of England, Ever Since the Reformation, Believ'd the Divine Right of Bishops. By Thomas Gipps, Rector of Bury in Lancashire. London: printed by Tho. Warren, for Ephraim Johnson bookseller in Manchester, 1699.

MLA (9th ed.) Citation

Gipps, Thomas. Tentamen Novum Continuatum. Or, An Answer to Mr Owen's Plea and Defense. Wherein Bishop Pearson's Chronology About the Time of St. Paul's Constituting Timothy Bishop of Ephesus, and Titus of Crete, Is Confirm'd; the Second Epistle to Timothy Demonstrated to Have Been Written in the Apostle's Latter Imprisonment at Rome; and All Mr. Owen's Arguments Drawn from Antiquity for Presbyterian Parity and Ordination by Presbyters, Are Overthrown. Herein Is More Particularly Prov'd, That the Church of England, Ever Since the Reformation, Believ'd the Divine Right of Bishops. By Thomas Gipps, Rector of Bury in Lancashire. printed by Tho. Warren, for Ephraim Johnson bookseller in Manchester, 1699.

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