Cita APA (7a ed.)

Aitken, J. (1777). The life of James Aitken, commonly called John the Painter, an incendiary, who was tried at the Castle of Winchester, on Thursday the 7th day of March, 1777, and convicted of setting fire to His Majesty's dock-yard, at Portsmouth, exhibiting a detail of facts of the utmost importance to Great Britain. Printed by J. Wilkes : Sold by S. Crowder, G. Robinson, and R. Baldwin, Pater-Noster-Row, and T. Evans in the Strand.

Cita Chicago Style (17a ed.)

Aitken, James. The Life of James Aitken, Commonly Called John the Painter, an Incendiary, Who Was Tried at the Castle of Winchester, on Thursday the 7th Day of March, 1777, and Convicted of Setting Fire to His Majesty's Dock-yard, at Portsmouth, Exhibiting a Detail of Facts of the Utmost Importance to Great Britain. Winton [i.e. Winchester]: Printed by J. Wilkes : Sold by S. Crowder, G. Robinson, and R. Baldwin, Pater-Noster-Row, and T. Evans in the Strand, 1777.

Cita MLA (8a ed.)

Aitken, James. The Life of James Aitken, Commonly Called John the Painter, an Incendiary, Who Was Tried at the Castle of Winchester, on Thursday the 7th Day of March, 1777, and Convicted of Setting Fire to His Majesty's Dock-yard, at Portsmouth, Exhibiting a Detail of Facts of the Utmost Importance to Great Britain. Printed by J. Wilkes : Sold by S. Crowder, G. Robinson, and R. Baldwin, Pater-Noster-Row, and T. Evans in the Strand, 1777.

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