APA (7th ed.) Citation

English gentleman abroad. (1679). Popery and tyranny, or, The present state of France in relation to its government, trade, manners of the people, and nature of the countrey: As it was sent in a letter from an English gentleman abroad to his friend in England : wherein may be seen the tyranny the subjects of France are under, being enslaved by the two greatest enemies to reason ... popery and arbitrary power. [s.n.].

Chicago Style (17th ed.) Citation

English gentleman abroad. Popery and Tyranny, or, The Present State of France in Relation to Its Government, Trade, Manners of the People, and Nature of the Countrey: As It Was Sent in a Letter from an English Gentleman Abroad to His Friend in England : Wherein May Be Seen the Tyranny the Subjects of France Are Under, Being Enslaved by the Two Greatest Enemies to Reason ... Popery and Arbitrary Power. London: [s.n.], 1679.

MLA (9th ed.) Citation

English gentleman abroad. Popery and Tyranny, or, The Present State of France in Relation to Its Government, Trade, Manners of the People, and Nature of the Countrey: As It Was Sent in a Letter from an English Gentleman Abroad to His Friend in England : Wherein May Be Seen the Tyranny the Subjects of France Are Under, Being Enslaved by the Two Greatest Enemies to Reason ... Popery and Arbitrary Power. [s.n.], 1679.


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