APA (7th ed.) Citation

(1723). A caveat against the Pretender: Being a short, but impartial history of some of the assassinations, murders, and inhumane slaughters, committed by papists upon protestants: with a particular account of the massacres of Ireland and Paris, and of the Bloody Inquisition. And also An Estimate of the Proportion of the Lands of the Nation, formerly possess'd by the Church of Rome, and which would be again in their Hands, should Popery return. To which is premis'd, Some Account of Popish Principles; shewing, that they necessarily lead to all this Barbarity; and particularly, that if ever a Popish Prince usurp the British Throne, he is bound by all that is sacred, to extirpate and destroy his Protestant Subjects, upon Pain of Damnation. printed for J. Morley, at the Cross-Keys in the Poultrey.

Chicago Style (17th ed.) Citation

A Caveat Against the Pretender: Being a Short, but Impartial History of Some of the Assassinations, Murders, and Inhumane Slaughters, Committed by Papists upon Protestants: With a Particular Account of the Massacres of Ireland and Paris, and of the Bloody Inquisition. And Also An Estimate of the Proportion of the Lands of the Nation, Formerly Possess'd by the Church of Rome, and Which Would Be Again in Their Hands, Should Popery Return. To Which Is Premis'd, Some Account of Popish Principles; Shewing, That They Necessarily Lead to All This Barbarity; and Particularly, That If Ever a Popish Prince Usurp the British Throne, He Is Bound by All That Is Sacred, to Extirpate and Destroy His Protestant Subjects, upon Pain of Damnation. London: printed for J. Morley, at the Cross-Keys in the Poultrey, 1723.

MLA (9th ed.) Citation

A Caveat Against the Pretender: Being a Short, but Impartial History of Some of the Assassinations, Murders, and Inhumane Slaughters, Committed by Papists upon Protestants: With a Particular Account of the Massacres of Ireland and Paris, and of the Bloody Inquisition. And Also An Estimate of the Proportion of the Lands of the Nation, Formerly Possess'd by the Church of Rome, and Which Would Be Again in Their Hands, Should Popery Return. To Which Is Premis'd, Some Account of Popish Principles; Shewing, That They Necessarily Lead to All This Barbarity; and Particularly, That If Ever a Popish Prince Usurp the British Throne, He Is Bound by All That Is Sacred, to Extirpate and Destroy His Protestant Subjects, upon Pain of Damnation. printed for J. Morley, at the Cross-Keys in the Poultrey, 1723.

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