APA (7th ed.) Citation

Ashhurst, W. (1648). Reasons against agreement with a late printed paper, intituled, Foundations of freedome, or, The agreement of the people: Vvhereby it doth appear, that the particulars proposed in the said paper are not foundations of freedome, but of tyrannie and slaverie to the people, being destructive to religion, laws, liberty, and government, against our Covenant and protestations, and very dangerous and unsafe for the kingdom. Printed for Tho. Underhill.

Chicago Style (17th ed.) Citation

Ashhurst, William. Reasons Against Agreement with a Late Printed Paper, Intituled, Foundations of Freedome, or, The Agreement of the People: Vvhereby It Doth Appear, That the Particulars Proposed in the Said Paper Are Not Foundations of Freedome, but of Tyrannie and Slaverie to the People, Being Destructive to Religion, Laws, Liberty, and Government, Against Our Covenant and Protestations, and Very Dangerous and Unsafe for the Kingdom. London: Printed for Tho. Underhill, 1648.

MLA (9th ed.) Citation

Ashhurst, William. Reasons Against Agreement with a Late Printed Paper, Intituled, Foundations of Freedome, or, The Agreement of the People: Vvhereby It Doth Appear, That the Particulars Proposed in the Said Paper Are Not Foundations of Freedome, but of Tyrannie and Slaverie to the People, Being Destructive to Religion, Laws, Liberty, and Government, Against Our Covenant and Protestations, and Very Dangerous and Unsafe for the Kingdom. Printed for Tho. Underhill, 1648.

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