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Taxation of the church.
because he wanted to divorce catrine of aragon but the pope would't let him
That is a matter of personal opinion. Some might argue that Henry VII as the first Tudor monarch and founder of the dynasty was the most successful. Others might argue that Henry VIII, creator of the Church of England, was the most successful while others again might argue in favour of Elizabeth I, who successfully opposed the Spanish armada. There are also arguments in favour of both Mary I and Edward VI.
Henry was the Head of the Church in England from the moment he ascended the English throne as all monarchs, including the papacy were! This was because it was there duty as monarch to keep the law! In his private life, he wanted an annulment to further his attachment to a younger woman. his wife refused. Henry then tried to buy an annulment from the Bishop of Rome, this is what his cousin of France had done some time previously! Unfortunately for Henry, the Pope was a prisoner of the Emperor of Germany, the Emperor in turn was the nephew of Henry's wife, the English Queen. He didn't want his family name dragged through the mire and pressured the pope to refuse Henry! Catholic theology doesn't appear to play a great part in the matter! The result was Henry , after great expense, pointed out to the Bishop of Rome that he had no right , according to the Canons of the Church, to interfere in another bishops see! Unable to argue, Henry was right, the pope sulked and refused to be in Communion with Henry!
Malthus would argue no. Henry George would argue yes.
Well, arguably he didn't! Henry wanted a divorce from Katherine of Aragon, with whom he had failed to produce a son and heir. He had also fallen in love with Anne Boleyn, who was determined not to do as her sister did, and become his mistress. Henry tried to divorce Katherine; unfortunately, the pope, who was the only person at the time who could grant a divorce, was the prisoner of Katherine's nephew, so refused the divorce. Wolsey suggested that, as king, Henry made his own rules in his own country, and did not need the pope's permission - the claims of the papacy to be superior to any secular ruler had always been unpopular. Henry was God's representative in England, and therefore the natural ruler of the church in England. Parliament was bullied to passing the Act of Supremacy, which made Henry Supreme Head of the Church in England. That done, all Henry needed, Wolsey argued, was the agreement of the English prelates who, (with a few brave exceptions) were not going to argue with Henry, so they gave him his divorce. However, Henry remained a Catholic to the end of his life - as one writer put it, at the end of his reign he was persecuting Catholics for treason and Protestants for heresy! It was in the reigns of his son, Edward VI, who was a fervent Protestant, and Elizabeth, who was a religious pragmatist, that the Church of England was really formed, with a more Protestant theological base. Hope this helps!
yes
Because Becket was starting to support the Pope more than Henry....
Patric Henry argue that the colonist must do is they have to hard work
Create panic Argue during Robbery Don’t panic or argue during a robbery All Above
he was right
Yes, but only when he thinks he's right.