< Page:Church and State under the Tudors.djvu
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CONTENTS


CHAPTER IV

REIGN OF HENRY VIII (continued)

datepage
Murder of Hun151358
Case argued before the King—Henry's Speech on the Occasion59
Unpopularity of the Clergy—Henry's Divorce affords the immediate Occasion of the Breach with Rome60
Primâ facie Henry was right61
Different Views of the Papal Dispensation62
Character of Clement VII.—How Henry became a Reformer63
Rise of the Divorce Question—Parliament152964
Its important Acts—Henry's Proclamation153065
Submission of the Clergy153165
Important Acts—Limiting the Privilege of the Clergy153266
Petition of Convocation against the Annates—Complaint of the Commons against the Clergy153266
Petition of the Clergy against recent Acts—Surrender of Convocation67
Comments of Chapuys on the Work of the Session68
Bishop Stubbs's account of the Mediaeval Theory of Church and State69
Henry, Pope of England—Protest and Death of Archbishop Warham—Parliament not always submissive70
Statute of Appeals
April 5th,
 
153371
Convocation pronounces Katherine's Marriage null71
Coronation of Anne Boleyn, June 1st—Date of her Marriage72
Act for the Submission of the Clergy—Act against Payment of Annates—Act against Payment of Peter's Pence, &c.—The Supremacy Act153473
Convocation Petitions for a Translation of Scripture—The Archbishop changes his Title74
Act for the Oath to the Succession—Attainder of Fisher and More—Act of Supremacy75
Made Henry Pope77
Cromwell becomes Vicegerent—Fisher and More beheaded—Paul III. excommunicates Henry—First Visitation of the Monasteries153578
Act for Review of Ecclesiastical Laws—Act for Dissolving Smaller Religious Houses—Dissolution of Parliament of 1529—New Parliament and Convocation—Fall of Anne Boleyn78
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