APA (7th ed.) Citation

Bèze, T. d., & Stockwood, J. (1580). A shorte learned and pithie treatize of the plague: Wherin are handled these two questions: the one, whether the plague bee infectious, or no: the other, whether and howe farre it may of Christians bee shunned by going aside. A discourse very necessary for this our tyme, and country; to satisfie the doubtful consciences of a great number: written in Latin by the famous & worthy diuine Theodore Beza Vezelian; and newly turned into English, by Iohn Stockwood, schoolemaister of Tunbridge. At the three Cranes in the Vinetree by Thomas Dawson, for George Bishop.

Chicago Style (17th ed.) Citation

Bèze, Théodore de, and John Stockwood. A Shorte Learned and Pithie Treatize of the Plague: Wherin Are Handled These Two Questions: The One, Whether the Plague Bee Infectious, or No: The Other, Whether and Howe Farre It May of Christians Bee Shunned by Going Aside. A Discourse Very Necessary for This Our Tyme, and Country; to Satisfie the Doubtful Consciences of a Great Number: Written in Latin by the Famous & Worthy Diuine Theodore Beza Vezelian; and Newly Turned into English, by Iohn Stockwood, Schoolemaister of Tunbridge. Imprinted at London: At the three Cranes in the Vinetree by Thomas Dawson, for George Bishop, 1580.

MLA (9th ed.) Citation

Bèze, Théodore de, and John Stockwood. A Shorte Learned and Pithie Treatize of the Plague: Wherin Are Handled These Two Questions: The One, Whether the Plague Bee Infectious, or No: The Other, Whether and Howe Farre It May of Christians Bee Shunned by Going Aside. A Discourse Very Necessary for This Our Tyme, and Country; to Satisfie the Doubtful Consciences of a Great Number: Written in Latin by the Famous & Worthy Diuine Theodore Beza Vezelian; and Newly Turned into English, by Iohn Stockwood, Schoolemaister of Tunbridge. At the three Cranes in the Vinetree by Thomas Dawson, for George Bishop, 1580.

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