King Henry VIII (8th).
No, it was Henry who wanted that.
Pope Clement VII refused to grant Henry an annulment of his marriage.Henry wanted a male heir.Henry wanted a different wife.Catholic AnswerIt started out for purely political reasons, as mentioned above. The Pope ruled that the King was validly married to Catherine of Aagorn and could not get an annulment (a decree that no valid marriage ever existed) and Henry wanted to marry again to get a male heir, he already had a daughter. So Henry made parliament the "head" of the "church" in England so that they could grant him an annulment.
He did not establish the Roman Catholic Church. He established the Church of England. He wanted to be both head of state and of the Church. The pope, the head of the Catholic church had a lot of power and influence, and he wanted that power Also, he wanted a annulment of his marriage that the pope wouldn't give him. So he made a new church.
Henry the Eighth, King of England, wanted a divorce from his wife so he could marry another. The Pope refused to give him an annulment. He broke from the Catholic church and established his own, the state-run Church of England.
Annulm
Because the Pope wouldn't approve of an annulment from his marriage to Catherine of Aragon.
A:Pope Clement VII was favourably disposed towards granting King Henry VIII the requested annulment, but feared antagonising the French king. In addition, he was a man widely known for avoiding decisions if at all possible, sometimes known derogatorily as "I will, I will not."
money and Henry wanted a divorce Henry didn't want a divorce, he wanted an annulment, something different! Neither did he break away, Henry followed the teaching of the early church and told the pope he had no authority in England. This was perfectly true. For ttrad Catholics papal authority is limited!
As a young person she wanted an education and developed an interest in church reform. When she was in her early twenties, she wanted to have an advantagious marriage to a noble. When Henry started showing an interest, she might have been afraid at first, but saw her advantage when he promised her his first marriage would be annulled. In the years after that she wanted nothing more than an annulment and marriage to the king. When she was married, she wanted to bear him a son. When this did not happen, she wanted to survive. In her last days, she might have desired a quick death.
Can you cancel your annulment
no, as annulment means the marriage never happened. Fraud in terms of annulment means simply a misrepresentation. Be happy that you got an annulment and move on.