If something really bad happens or you go to court and you get permission.
Before consummating marriage if their partner is an abuser or if they the don't want to have any more children.
The Church of Scotland does not grant annulments of marriages. It is, however, possible for someone who is divorced to be remarried in the Church of Scotland (subject to the permission of the Minister of the local parish church).
Henry left the Roman Catholic Church when the Pope refused to grant him an annulment from one of his marriages.
The Anglican Church was formed under the reign of King Henry VIII of England in the 16th century. His desire for an annulment from Catherine of Aragon, which the Pope refused to grant, led him to break away from the Roman Catholic Church. This resulted in the establishment of the Church of England, with the monarch as its Supreme Head.
.Catholic AnswerCertainly not, because he was not eligible for an annulment, the Pope did not grant him one, so Henry VIII took his entire country into heresy to satisfy himself.
It was political: The Pope refused to grant an annulment to King Henry VIII.
The Anglican Church was established by King Henry VIII in the 16th century primarily to obtain an annulment from his first wife, Catherine of Aragon. When Pope Clement VII refused to grant the annulment, Henry broke away from the Roman Catholic Church and formed the Church of England, asserting his authority as its Supreme Head. This separation allowed him to remarry and pursue a male heir, which was a significant factor in the English Reformation.
If you file charges against your husband for bigamy charges, then the same court will grant you a annulment.
The pope refused to grant Henry an annulment or divorce. Henry VIII then decided to split with the Church and became the head ('pope?') of the Anglican Church and granted himself a divorce.
In a nutshell: Henry formed his own Church, the Church of England, and declared himself the head. He then granted himself a divorce. The pope then excommunicated Henry.
In the 1530's Henry VIII broke away from the Catholic Church because the Pope would not grant him an annulment from his marriage. He founded an Anglican church, the Church of England, in order to divorce his wife Katherine of Aragon. This act was in direct opposition of the Catholic Church.
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.