Boccaccio, G., & Lydgate, J. (1554). A treatise excellent and compe[n]dious, shewing and declaring, in maner of tragedye, the falles of sondry most notable princes and princesses vvith other nobles, through ye mutabilitie and change of vnstedfast fortune: Together with their most detestable [and] wicked vices. First compyled in Latin by the excellent clerke Bocatius, an Italian borne. And sence that tyme translated into our English and vulgare tong, by Dan Iohn Lidgate monke of Burye (And nowe newly imprynted, corrected, and augmented out of diuerse and sundry olde writen copies in parchment.). In ædibus Richardi Tottelli. Cum priuilegio.
Chicago Style (17th ed.) CitationBoccaccio, Giovanni, and John Lydgate. A Treatise Excellent and Compe[n]dious, Shewing and Declaring, in Maner of Tragedye, the Falles of Sondry Most Notable Princes and Princesses Vvith Other Nobles, Through Ye Mutabilitie and Change of Vnstedfast Fortune: Together with Their Most Detestable [and] Wicked Vices. First Compyled in Latin by the Excellent Clerke Bocatius, an Italian Borne. And Sence That Tyme Translated into Our English and Vulgare Tong, by Dan Iohn Lidgate Monke of Burye. And nowe newly imprynted, corrected, and augmented out of diuerse and sundry olde writen copies in parchment. [London]: In ædibus Richardi Tottelli. Cum priuilegio, 1554.
MLA (9th ed.) CitationBoccaccio, Giovanni, and John Lydgate. A Treatise Excellent and Compe[n]dious, Shewing and Declaring, in Maner of Tragedye, the Falles of Sondry Most Notable Princes and Princesses Vvith Other Nobles, Through Ye Mutabilitie and Change of Vnstedfast Fortune: Together with Their Most Detestable [and] Wicked Vices. First Compyled in Latin by the Excellent Clerke Bocatius, an Italian Borne. And Sence That Tyme Translated into Our English and Vulgare Tong, by Dan Iohn Lidgate Monke of Burye. And nowe newly imprynted, corrected, and augmented out of diuerse and sundry olde writen copies in parchment. In ædibus Richardi Tottelli. Cum priuilegio, 1554.