The catholic monestaries were very wealthy, most containing gold crusifixes bejeweled with rubies and emeralds, old valuable texts, and money. By this time in history Henry was very-but not notably-poor. His father never spent more than he had to and was very greedy with his wealth. Henry wanted fun, and fun costs alot of money. Henry ate fine food, listened to lovely music, wore nice clothes, and had lots of entertainment. He spent alot of his fathers money and now he needed to find a way to make some. Though not all the monestaries were corupt some were. Henry wanted to take their wealth and move it to his fund. just as a note, Anne Boleyn-Henry's wife at the time-greatly apposed the moving of the money. she wanted the corupt monestaries closed down but they money and resources be used to works of charity.
To learn more about Henry VIII or Anne Boleyn go to TudorHistory.org.
look in the history book Rats, Bulls, and Flying Machines! It's by Deborah Mazzota PRum
it depends on where the church is
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There is no "Roman Catholic Church." It’s just Catholic, not Roman Catholic. Roman is an epithet first commonly used in England after the protestant revolt to describe the Catholic Church. It is never used by the official Catholic Church. Secondly, they did not split, the Church of England was created out of nothing by Henry VIII, parliament, and Elizabeth I of England in the sixteenth century. It was primarily created because of Henry's personal sin and greed. The pope at that time would not grant him an annulment, which is a declaration that his marriage was invalid, for the simple reason that it wasn't. Henry wanted his way, not God's way, so he formed his own personal Church that would cater to his whims. He used it as an excuse to beggar hundreds of cloistered nuns and monks and take their property and goods for himself and his nobles. Henry and Elizabeth used their personal Church as a sort of religious nationalism to bolster the English spirit and drive God out of their land.
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Some people drive to church.
Chapter 8, section 1 likely pertains to a period or topic where there was a push for reform within a certain context, such as political, social, or economic. Reform movements during this time could include initiatives to address issues like corruption, inequality, or lack of rights. It would be beneficial to further specify the context or time period in order to provide a more precise answer to the drive for reform during that chapter.
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so people can drive and not walk
yes he can... he posts photos on his twitter all the time
No. Henry VIII was alive during the 16th century and the automobile was not invented until hundreds of years later.