APA (7th ed.) Citation

Leeds, T. O. (1722). The English subject's right to the liberty of his person, asserted in the argument made by the Earl of Danby (afterwards Duke of Leedes) at the Court of King's Bench, on his motion for bail, after an imprisonment of above forty months in the tower of London. Printed for J. Peele, at Lock's Head in Pater-Noster-Row.

Chicago Style (17th ed.) Citation

Leeds, Thomas Osborne. The English Subject's Right to the Liberty of His Person, Asserted in the Argument Made by the Earl of Danby (afterwards Duke of Leedes) at the Court of King's Bench, on His Motion for Bail, After an Imprisonment of Above Forty Months in the Tower of London. London: Printed for J. Peele, at Lock's Head in Pater-Noster-Row, 1722.

MLA (9th ed.) Citation

Leeds, Thomas Osborne. The English Subject's Right to the Liberty of His Person, Asserted in the Argument Made by the Earl of Danby (afterwards Duke of Leedes) at the Court of King's Bench, on His Motion for Bail, After an Imprisonment of Above Forty Months in the Tower of London. Printed for J. Peele, at Lock's Head in Pater-Noster-Row, 1722.

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