The King Spain is the Head of State. That is his person represents the country to the world. He does not have any administrative authority. The Queen is quite simply, his wife.
The Pope is the Spiritual Leader of all Roman Catholics in the world. He is also the man in charge of the entire apparatus of the world wide Roman Catholic Church. He has much more power than any monarch.
Pope Sixtus V renewed the excommunication of England's Queen Elizabeth I. He also subsidized the planned invasion of England by King Philip II of Spain.
Pope Innocent III
In the Early Middle Ages, and in the rest of the middle ages in the West, the Pope was most powerful. In the later middle ages in the East, it was the Patriarch of Constantinople.
Palaces are large impressive buildings being the residences of the King and Queen, the Pope, the Archbishop and so on
when king Henry the eight of England wanted an anulment or divorce, from his wife Cathrine of Aragon daughter of king Ferdinan and queen isabela of Spain, pope Clement did not give them one. king Henry ordered the arch bishop of cantinberry to do it, then pope Clement excommunicated King Henry so he begian the protestant church of England with him at the head of it.
King Philip II of Spain was a catholic, as was all Spain; Queen Elizabeth I was a protestant, as was most of England and to Philips' eyes they were heretics. Philip had the blessing of the pope for the invasion of England to spread catholicism.
The Pope holds more spiritual power as the leader of the Catholic Church, while the Queen of England holds more political power as the head of state.
king Henry because he is king and he has loads of powers where as the Parliament has not got authority thaat much !
There is no pope of Spain, only the pope who resides in the Vatican who is the pope of ALL countries.
There is no pope in Spain, only in Vatican City. However, there have been two popes from Spain: Pope Alexander VI and Pope Callixtus III.
Pope Innocent III was the most powerful pope of Medieval times.
Because he hated Henry VIII