APA (7th ed.) Citation

Brooks, F., & Bohun, E. (1700). Barbarian cruelty: Being a true history of the distressed condition of the Christian captives under the tyranny of Mully Ishmael, Emperor of Morocco, and King of Fez and Macqueness in Barbary : in which is likewise given a particular account of his late wars with the Algerines, the manner of his pirates taking the Christians and others, his breach of faith with Christian princes, a description of his castles and guards, and the places where he keeps his women, his slaves and negroes : with a particular relation of the dangerous escape of the author and two English men more from thence, after a miserable slavery of ten years. Re printed for S. Phillips at the Brick Shop.

Chicago Style (17th ed.) Citation

Brooks, Francis, and Edmund Bohun. Barbarian Cruelty: Being a True History of the Distressed Condition of the Christian Captives Under the Tyranny of Mully Ishmael, Emperor of Morocco, and King of Fez and Macqueness in Barbary : In Which Is Likewise Given a Particular Account of His Late Wars with the Algerines, the Manner of His Pirates Taking the Christians and Others, His Breach of Faith with Christian Princes, a Description of His Castles and Guards, and the Places Where He Keeps His Women, His Slaves and Negroes : With a Particular Relation of the Dangerous Escape of the Author and Two English Men More from Thence, After a Miserable Slavery of Ten Years. Boston: Re printed for S. Phillips at the Brick Shop, 1700.

MLA (9th ed.) Citation

Brooks, Francis, and Edmund Bohun. Barbarian Cruelty: Being a True History of the Distressed Condition of the Christian Captives Under the Tyranny of Mully Ishmael, Emperor of Morocco, and King of Fez and Macqueness in Barbary : In Which Is Likewise Given a Particular Account of His Late Wars with the Algerines, the Manner of His Pirates Taking the Christians and Others, His Breach of Faith with Christian Princes, a Description of His Castles and Guards, and the Places Where He Keeps His Women, His Slaves and Negroes : With a Particular Relation of the Dangerous Escape of the Author and Two English Men More from Thence, After a Miserable Slavery of Ten Years. Re printed for S. Phillips at the Brick Shop, 1700.

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