Charlemagne
Depends on your definition. Henry VIII broke with Rome but Edward was the first Catholic king.
No king has ever replaced a pope as head of the Catholic Church. Henry VIII did break from the Catholic Church and formed what is the Church of England but which is not a Catholic Church as it is not in union with Rome.
Roman Catholic AnswerThe Catholic Church is under God, and His Vicar on earth: the Pope in Rome. The Church has never been subject to any secular king.
If you mean the first king of Rome, it was Romulus.If you mean the first king of Rome, it was Romulus.If you mean the first king of Rome, it was Romulus.If you mean the first king of Rome, it was Romulus.If you mean the first king of Rome, it was Romulus.If you mean the first king of Rome, it was Romulus.If you mean the first king of Rome, it was Romulus.If you mean the first king of Rome, it was Romulus.If you mean the first king of Rome, it was Romulus.
The king either assumed the authority by might, was appointed by his predecessor (usually inherited). Some were also appointed by the Catholic Church in Rome.
Almost certainly not. Shakespeare was born in England after King Henry VIII broke with Rome and established the Church of England. It was illegal to be Catholic in England during Shakespeare's lifetime.
Somebody from New Spain.
The King of Rome was created in 1988.
The Pope is the Bishop of Rome and the Vicar of Christ on Earth. There is nothing in Catholic doctrine or even custom to call him any title such as king of heavens and earth.
Henry always claimed to be a good Catholic, a better Catholic than the Pope.Accordingly to Henry the Pope was merely Bishop of Rome, and his jurisdiction waslimited to Rome. By comparison, the King of each country was head of the CatholicChurch in said country. The control of the Church by the Bishop of Rome was therefore a usurpation, and the clergy who assented to it were guilty of "praemunire", i.e. loyalty to a foreign ruler (at the time the Pope was temporal ruler of Rome), rather then the King. Howeverin doctrine Henry demanded assent to all traditional Catholic beliefs (i.e. justification through faith and good works) including the sacraments.
all the soldiers and men who helped to defend the castle would live in the bailey as well as the king/queen.
No. He was the King of Jerusalem.