History > England under the Tudors > Henry VIII (150947) > The break with Rome

With Wolsey and his papal authority gone, Henry turned to the authority of the state to obtain his annulment. The so-called Reformation Parliament that first met in November 1529 was unprecedented; it lasted seven years, enacted 137 statutes (32 of which were of vital importance), and legislated in areas that no medieval Parliament had ever dreamed of entering. King in Parliament became the revolutionary instrument by which the medieval church was destroyed.
The first step was to intimidate the church, and in 1531 the representatives of the clergy who were gathered in Convocation were forced under threat of praemunire (a statute prohibiting the operation of the legal and financial jurisdiction of the pope without royal consent) to grant Henry a gift of £119,000 and to acknowledge him supreme head of the church as far as the law of Christ allows. Then the government struck at the papacy, threatening to cut off its revenues; the Annates Statute of 1532 empowered Henry, if he saw fit, to abolish payment to Rome of the first year's income of all newly installed bishops. The implied threat had little effect on the pope, and time was running out, for by December 1532 Anne Boleyn was pregnant, and on Jan. 25, 1533, she was secretly married to Henry. If the king was to be saved from bigamy and if his child was to be born in holy wedlock, he had less than eight months to get rid of Catherine of Aragon. Archbishop William Warham had conveniently died in August 1532, and in March 1533 a demoralized and frightened pontiff sanctioned the installation of Thomas Cranmer as primate of the English church.
Cranmer was a friend of the annulment, but, before he could oblige his sovereign, the queen's right of appeal from the archbishop's court to Rome had to be destroyed; this could be done only by cutting the constitutional cords holding England to the papacy. Consequently, in April 1533 the crucial statute was enacted; the Act of Restraint of Appeals boldly decreed that this realm of England is an empire. A month later an obliging archbishop heard the case and adjudged the king's marriage to be null and void. On June 1 Anne was crowned rightful queen of England, and three months and a week later, on Sept. 7, 1533, the royal child was born. To the great shame and confusion of astrologers, it turned out to be Elizabeth Tudor (later Elizabeth I).
Henry was mortified; he had risked his soul and his crown for yet another girl. But Anne had proved her fertility, and it was hoped that a male heir would shortly follow. In the meantime it was necessary to complete the break with Rome and rebuild the Church of England. By the Act of Succession of March 1534, subjects were ordered to accept the king's marriage to Anne as undoubted, true, sincere and perfect. A second Statute in Restraint of Annates severed most of the financial ties with Rome, and in November the constitutional revolution was solemnized in the Act of Supremacy, which announced that Henry Tudor was and always had been Supreme Head of the Church of England; not even the qualifying phrase as far as the law of Christ allows was retained.
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