There were no protestants before that time in England.
The only reason Henry VIII broke away from the church is so he could divorce Catharine of Aragon (divorce was not allowed in the Catholic Church) and marry Anne Boleyn.
Actually, Martin Luther had already made his split from the Catholic Church before Henry had is 'little problem.' He defended the Church against Martin Luther's heresies and received the title of 'Defender of the Faith' from the pope.
Since vampires do not exist, they have no effect on the Catholic Church.
Inspirations to begin the reformatin of the catholic church
decline in religious unity and in the power of the Catholic Church
haah youre on idla as well sucker.
decline in the power of the roman catholic church
Decline in the power of the Roman Catholic Church.
Talk to the priest at your local Catholic church about having your husband's first marriage annulled. While the Catholic Church does not recognise civil divorce, it does offer annulments where it believes the circumstances are justified. Since the Catholic Church regards marriage as a binding commitment, an annulment has the effect of saying that, in the view of the Church, the marriage never really happened.
Pope Clement V had a profound effect on the Catholic Church that was to last for centuries. Pope Clement V is the first of the Avignon popes-the first pope who set up resident in Avignon, France, and never set foot in Rome. The long term effect of the Avignon papacy was to weaken the influence of the Catholic Church and hasten that decline that resulted in the protestant revolt two centuries later.
decline in religious unity and in the power of the Catholic Church
The power of the Catholic Church in Europe was weakened.
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. The Catholic Church served to preserve learning throughout the "Dark Ages." It also tended to provide some cohesion to the disparate European states as well as an important arbiter of political disagreements.
First of all, Roman is an epithet first commonly used in England after the protestant revolt to describe the Catholic Church. It is rarely used by the Catholic Church. Secondly, your question makes no sense as neither was an effect of the other. Catholicism was effected by Our Blessed Lord establishing His Church on earth - His Mystical Body (see St. Paul). The protestant religions were an effect of sin on individuals unable to follow Christ's Church and so making up their own in order to live with their sins. Lutheranism was an effect of Martin Luther's, Anglicanism was an effect of King Henry VIII and his daughter, Elizabeth, etc.