The Act of Supremacy, which set up Henry VIII as head of the English church, was enacted in 1534. Henry broke away from the Church of Rome because he went to the Pope to ask for a divorce from his first wife Catherine but the Pope would not perform the procedure. As a result Henry left and set himself up as head of the church in England.
Henry was married to Catherine of Aragon but she had failed to produce a male heir to the throne. Henry wanted to either annul the marriage or divorce her so he could marry another. The pope refused to allow him to either annul the marriage or divorce Catherine so Henry broke with the Catholic Church and formed the Church of England with himself as the head. He granted himself a divorce.
because he wanted to marry anne Boleyn to do that he had to break with rome so he could divorce catherine of argon.
He didn't.
The break with Rome came under the reign of his son, King Henry VIII.
Henry the VIII broke away from the catholic church in 1533.
Henry was excommunicated in 1533 and named himself as head of his own Church of England the following year.
the main reason King Henry had split from the Catholic Church was they didn't allow him to divorce his wife which angered Henry into leaving the church
because he could not get divorced
The split happened in 1534.
No king has ever replaced a pope as head of the Catholic Church. Henry VIII did break from the Catholic Church and formed what is the Church of England but which is not a Catholic Church as it is not in union with Rome.
Henry VIII wanted to break with Rome, but not the Catholic religion. The Church in England, at least during Henry's reign, remained Catholic in theology and liturgy. After the break and until Henry's death, the Protestant religion was still illegal in England.
Henry III did not break with Rome, but was a pious Catholic.
When the pope refused to grant Henry VIII a divorce, he decided to break with Rome and appointed himself as the head of the church in England.
No, Henry VII had no problems with the Catholic Church but wanted to be able to get a divorce when he wanted one. When Henry became the patriarch of the Church of England, he was very conservative with his religious beliefs and made few changes to Catholic Doctrine.
his pending divorce to katherine of aragon due to the desire to marry anne boleyn -------------------------Henry didn't break away from the Catholic Church at any time and as far as I can tell, never thought of it! What he did was to point out that the Bishop of Rome had no authority anywhere but in his own see.
Yes Another answer: Henry VIII himself did not "break away" from the Catholic Church. Henry VIII was a devout Catholic who was awarded the title of "Defender of the Faith" by Pope Leo X after publishing his "Defence of the Seven Sacraments". Despite taking the English Catholic Church away from the authority of Rome and declaring himself Head of the newly formed Church of England, he and the Church, to some extent, remained Catholic. True Protestant reforms would come after he died.
Henry VIII was brought up Roman Catholic. Even after the break with the church of Rome he ran the Anglican church similar to that of Roman Catholicism. The changes did not appear between the two until the reign of his son Edward
Henry VIII never broke away from the Catholic Church. He was born a Catholic and died a Catholic. The church in England at that time was Catholic and remained so after his death. An act or Parliaments called the Act of Supremacy made Henry head of the Catholic church in England instead of the Pope in Rome. It is the break with Rome of the English Catholic Church for which Henry is remembered. It also gave Henry the opportunity to annul his marriage to CatherineThe Act of Supremacy of November 1534 (26 Hen. 8, c. 1) was an Act of the Parliament of England under King Henry VIII declaring that he was "the only supreme head on earth of the Church in England" and that the English crown shall enjoy "all honours, dignities, preeminences, jurisdictions, privileges, authorities, immunities, profits, and commodities to the said dignity.".[1] By the wording of the Act, it was made clear that Parliament was not granting the King the title (thereby suggesting that they had the right to later withdraw them) but rather it was stated as a recognized fact. In the Act of Supremacy, Henry abandoned Rome completely. He then went on to found a new church called Ecclesia Anglicana.Answer by a CatholicI don't believe that it was his greed that caused Henry VIII to break with Rome, I believe that it was his desire for a legitimate heir. As Rome would not allow him an annulment, saying that his marriage to his wife, Catherine, was valid, he could not "put her away" and marry his mistress. His "greed", if you will, overcame him after he made himself head of the Church of England.
yes he and catherine of aragon attached rome in order to conquer it
Henry VIII broke up with the Rome Church so that he can divorce Catherine of Aragon because the Roman Church wouldn't let him.
Roman Catholic AnswerIn England, Henry VIII split from the Catholic Church over the Church not allowing him to divorce his lawfully wedded wife. In Germany the princes in northern Germany used Martin Luther as an excuse to free themselves from Rome.