Franklin
The bee hiue of the Romishe Churche· [microform] : Wherein the authour a zealous Protestant, vnder the person of a superstitious papist, doth so driely refell the grose opinions of popery, and so diuinely defend the articles of Christianitie, that (the sacred Scriptures excepted) there is not a booke to be founde, either more necessarie for thy profite, or sweeter for thy comforte. Translated out of Dutch into English by George Gilpin the Elder.
MLA
Marnix van St. Aldegonde, Philips van, John Stell, and George Gilpin. The Bee Hiue of the Romishe Churche·: Wherein the Authour a Zealous Protestant, Vnder the Person of a Superstitious Papist, Doth So Driely Refell the Grose Opinions of Popery, and So Diuinely Defend the Articles of Christianitie, That (the Sacred Scriptures Excepted) There Is Not a Booke to Be Founde, Either More Necessarie for Thy Profite, Or Sweeter for Thy Comforte. Translated Out of Dutch Into English by George Gilpin the Elder. [London]: These bookes are to be soulde [by A. Maunsell] in Paules Churchyard, at the signe of the Parret. Printed at London [at the three Cranes in the Vinetree, by Thomas Dawson, for Iohn Stell], 1579.
APA
Marnix van St. Aldegonde, P. van, Stell, J., & Gilpin, G. (1579). The bee hiue of the Romishe Churche·: Wherein the authour a zealous Protestant, vnder the person of a superstitious papist, doth so driely refell the grose opinions of popery, and so diuinely defend the articles of Christianitie, that (the sacred Scriptures excepted) there is not a booke to be founde, either more necessarie for thy profite, or sweeter for thy comforte. Translated out of Dutch into English by George Gilpin the Elder. [London]: These bookes are to be soulde [by A. Maunsell] in Paules Churchyard, at the signe of the Parret. Printed at London [at the three Cranes in the Vinetree, by Thomas Dawson, for Iohn Stell].
Chicago
Marnix van St. Aldegonde, Philips van, John Stell, and George Gilpin. The Bee Hiue of the Romishe Churche·: Wherein the Authour a Zealous Protestant, Vnder the Person of a Superstitious Papist, Doth So Driely Refell the Grose Opinions of Popery, and So Diuinely Defend the Articles of Christianitie, That (the Sacred Scriptures Excepted) There Is Not a Booke to Be Founde, Either More Necessarie for Thy Profite, Or Sweeter for Thy Comforte. Translated Out of Dutch Into English by George Gilpin the Elder. [London]: These bookes are to be soulde [by A. Maunsell] in Paules Churchyard, at the signe of the Parret. Printed at London [at the three Cranes in the Vinetree, by Thomas Dawson, for Iohn Stell], 1579.