Annullment is not part of Jewish law or tradition. Traditional Jews wishing to separate must go through a Jewish divorce.
No. Only marriages can be annulled. If the parties wish to undo their divorce they must remarry.
Henry VIII had a total of four marriages annulled. First, he annulled his marriage to Catherine of Aragon in 1533. Henry VIII then had his marriage to Anne Boleyn annulled in May of 1536. Next, he annulled his marriage to Anne of Cleves in 1540. Henry's final marriage annulment occured in 1542, dissolving his marriage to Catherine Howard.
If your first two marriages get annulled.
No. Romney wanted same-sex marriage legislation struck down, the existing marriages annulled and all future marriages banned.
The only way for a person who was previously married to be wed again in a Catholic seromony is if the past spouse died or the marriage was annulled.
Nuremberg laws
Catholics and Jews
Both persons' first marriages must be annulled by Church, and then the couple must marry with a Catholic ceremony. If either of the first marriages are found valid by the Church and are not annulled, then the Catholic and divorced non-Catholic cannot validly marry in the eyes of the Church.
Yes - mostly among Orthodox Jews.
I am not an attorney. It terminates at the time of divorce, or at the death of either party. Marriages can be terminated by annulment if the marriage is voidable. Voidable marriages are valid marriages and can for various reasons be annulled and therefore terminated. Some annullments declare a marriage null and void right from the beginning, so those annullments don't technically terminate a marriage.
If minors (under the age of 18) run away and get married the parents can have it annulled (the marriage is no longer.) Also, in some States if a couple gets married and have not lived together for a year they too can have the marriage annulled. Other couples may run off to Reno for a 'quickie divorce.'
Not true - Jews get married on Sundays, maybe other religions too.