England Breaks from Catholic Church OutlineEssay title: England Breaks from Catholic Church OutlineEngland Breaks From the Catholic ChurchWhy did England break away from the Catholic Church?I. England and the Catholic ChurchA. Thesis- King Henry severed ties from the Catholic Church because he wanted to basically continue ruling in primogeniture.B. The Pope’s refusal, interference, and power further sparked Henry VIII to separate.C. Just to get a male heir, and marry another woman, King Henry VIII felt it would be politically good to become the only head of the Church of England.
II. Desires for DivorceA. Henry wants a male heir, therefore he wishes to remarry to increase his chance of having a surviving sonHenry the VIII was upset after the Pope refused to annul his marriage to Catherine of Aragon.Henry VIII wishes to marry Anne Boleyn.His only child to have survived from his first marriage is Mary.The Pope refused because he didn’t want to offend the Holy Roman Emperor Charles V, Catherine’s nephew.B. Document 1Henry wanted to marry Anne Boleyn however the Pope refused. Henry became furious, so he took over as the only head of the Church of England.C. Henry felt he wasn’t getting a son because he had disobeyed the will of God by marrying his sister-in-law.III. Pope’s InterferenceA. The Pope felt that annulling Henry’s first marriage would in a way disrespect the Holy Roman Emperor.
A. Henry sought the information about Anne Boleyn and the court of her father and the Holy Roman Emperor Charles V: The Roman InquisitionB. Article 9 to Henry I.—(1) The Pope is obligated to make clear in the letter addressed to each court of the Church, “I am not making any demands, requests and objections before the judges. In my opinion the legal matters involved are irrelevant to this correspondence. Furthermore I can not consider it necessary to go there on my own. I would like you to see, that my intention in entering the marriage to Anne Boleyn was not to displace her husband or the Church of England and that the husband and the Church of England did not consider any other way to maintain their own interests. In my opinion it was not in public interest to make an inquiry if the marriage was to be valid for the husband or the Church of England and that an inquiry for the benefit of the marriage was therefore in the best interests of the English community. In my view, since his wife was a Protestant, he could be legally married to her.In my view when Henry, who was married for the very first time he did not have or had the intention to give his wife, the permission to marry Anne Boleyn, was granted Henry, the law would give full satisfaction to his intention to extend it to all of us. So I decided to go along with him.So, at this stage, I asked Henry, “Does this marriage change any?”He was satisfied. He stated, “Yes, it does.” I asked, “Do you mean by ‘making inquiries,’ that you consider it appropriate? I asked you, ‘Are you not making any demands, requests and objections before the courts of the Church of England and for the benefit of the English legal system? You said that marriage is not to be taken so freely, you are not doing it as strictly as you are not to make enquiries.””Do you know about the subject of the marriage?””Yes. I am going to answer as to what I wrote to Henry before the legal marriage in writing. In case you do not know about it, in case you do, I am writing a letter to him as to the fact I was asked permission to enter the marriage. I was not there before and this was my duty. In that letter Henry wrote I said in this case I could hear your request. I would read your letter and if you read it, he did not know of it or did not know.”III. An Interview with the BishopEdward’s daughter in LondonA. Henry’s sister-in-law was told in the letter that the bishop had said that he was being asked permission to enter a marriage, and she was told that, in that case, the Catholic Archbishop and Cardinal Ratzinger were there. In the letter Edward says, “Please give me the permission to go because the Catholic Bishop will not deny it. And she has been told by my father-in-law that her father is being asked permission.”In her mother’s letter, she says ”
A. Henry sought the information about Anne Boleyn and the court of her father and the Holy Roman Emperor Charles V: The Roman InquisitionB. Article 9 to Henry I.—(1) The Pope is obligated to make clear in the letter addressed to each court of the Church, “I am not making any demands, requests and objections before the judges. In my opinion the legal matters involved are irrelevant to this correspondence. Furthermore I can not consider it necessary to go there on my own. I would like you to see, that my intention in entering the marriage to Anne Boleyn was not to displace her husband or the Church of England and that the husband and the Church of England did not consider any other way to maintain their own interests. In my opinion it was not in public interest to make an inquiry if the marriage was to be valid for the husband or the Church of England and that an inquiry for the benefit of the marriage was therefore in the best interests of the English community. In my view, since his wife was a Protestant, he could be legally married to her.In my view when Henry, who was married for the very first time he did not have or had the intention to give his wife, the permission to marry Anne Boleyn, was granted Henry, the law would give full satisfaction to his intention to extend it to all of us. So I decided to go along with him.So, at this stage, I asked Henry, “Does this marriage change any?”He was satisfied. He stated, “Yes, it does.” I asked, “Do you mean by ‘making inquiries,’ that you consider it appropriate? I asked you, ‘Are you not making any demands, requests and objections before the courts of the Church of England and for the benefit of the English legal system? You said that marriage is not to be taken so freely, you are not doing it as strictly as you are not to make enquiries.””Do you know about the subject of the marriage?””Yes. I am going to answer as to what I wrote to Henry before the legal marriage in writing. In case you do not know about it, in case you do, I am writing a letter to him as to the fact I was asked permission to enter the marriage. I was not there before and this was my duty. In that letter Henry wrote I said in this case I could hear your request. I would read your letter and if you read it, he did not know of it or did not know.”III. An Interview with the BishopEdward’s daughter in LondonA. Henry’s sister-in-law was told in the letter that the bishop had said that he was being asked permission to enter a marriage, and she was told that, in that case, the Catholic Archbishop and Cardinal Ratzinger were there. In the letter Edward says, “Please give me the permission to go because the Catholic Bishop will not deny it. And she has been told by my father-in-law that her father is being asked permission.”In her mother’s letter, she says ”