{{Short description|1536–1555 office in the Kingdom of England}} {{For|modern title that signifies titular leadership over the Church of England used since Elizabeth I|Supreme Governor of the Church of England}} {{Infobox official post | post = Supreme Head | body = the<br />Church of England | native_name = | insignia = | insigniasize = | insigniacaption = | flag = Flag of England.svg | flagsize = 125px | flagborder = yes | flagcaption = Flag of England and the Church of England | image = After Hans Holbein the Younger - Portrait of Henry VIII - Google Art Project.jpg | imagecaption = '''Longest in office<br>Henry VIII'''<br>1531–1547 | imagesize = 165px | alt = | incumbent = | acting = | incumbentsince = | department = Church of England | style = Majesty | type = | status = | abbreviation = | member_of = | reports_to = | residence = Palace of Whitehall | seat = | nominator = | appointer = | appointer_qualified = | termlength = | termlength_qualified = | constituting_instrument = Act of Supremacy of 1534 | precursor = The Pope (as head of the Roman Catholic Church) | formation = 1531 | first = Henry VIII | last = Mary I | abolished = 1555 | succession = Supreme Governor of the Church of England | unofficial_names = | deputy = | salary = | website = }} {{Portal|Christianity}} The title of '''Supreme Head of the Church of England''' was created in 1531<ref name="cathenc-H8">{{cite encyclopedia|title=Henry VIII|encyclopedia=Catholic Encyclopedia|year=1910|publisher=Robert Appleton Company|location=New York|url=http://www.newadvent.org/cathen/07222a.htm}}</ref> for King Henry VIII when he first began to separate the Church of England from the authority of the Holy See and allegiance to the papacy, then represented by Pope Clement VII. The Act of Supremacy of 1534 confirmed the King's status as having supremacy over the church and required the nobility to swear an oath recognising Henry's supremacy.<ref name="cathenc-H8"/> By 1536, Henry had broken with Rome, seized assets of the Catholic Church in England and Wales and declared the Church of England as the established church with himself as its head. Pope Paul III excommunicated Henry in 1538 over his divorce from Catherine of Aragon.
Similarly, in Ireland, the Parliament of Ireland passed the Act of Supremacy (Ireland) 1537, establishing Henry as '''Supreme Head of the Church of Ireland'''.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=njp.32101073364943;view=1up;seq=45|title=Statutes passed in the Parliaments held in Ireland ... from the third year of Edward the second, A.D. 1310 [to the fortieth year of George III, A.D. 1800, inclusive] ... v. 1.|website=HathiTrust}}</ref> Again Henry seized assets of the Catholic Church in Ireland and declared the Church of Ireland as the established church with himself as its head. He made himself King of Ireland in 1541, which reinforced his status (previous English kings had held the title of Lord of Ireland, and the island was considered a papal fief based on an 1155 papal bull).<ref>{{cite journal |last= Walshe |first = Helen Coburn |title=Enforcing the Elizabethan Settlement: The Vicissitudes of Hugh Brady, Bishop of Meath, 1563–84 |journal=Irish Historical Studies |date=November 1989 |volume=26 |issue=104|pages = 352–376 |doi = 10.1017/S0021121400010117 |jstor=30008693|s2cid = 159568621 }}</ref>
Henry's daughter, Queen Mary I, a staunch Catholic, attempted to restore the English and Irish churches' allegiance to the Pope and repealed the Act of Supremacy in 1555.<ref>{{cite encyclopedia|title=Mary Tudor|encyclopedia=Catholic Encyclopedia|year=1910|publisher=Robert Appleton Company|location=New York|url=http://www.newadvent.org/cathen/09766a.htm}}</ref> Her half-sister, Elizabeth I, took the throne in 1558 and the English Parliament passed the Act of Supremacy of 1558 that restored the original act; the Irish Parliament passed the similar Act of Supremacy (Ireland) 1560.<ref>{{Cite web |title=Act of Supremacy (Ireland) 1560 |url=https://www.legislation.gov.uk/aip/Eliz1/2/1}}</ref><ref>{{Cite journal |author=Jefferies, Henry A. |year=1988 |title=The Irish Parliament of 1560: The Anglican Reforms Authorised |url=http://www.jstor.org/stable/30008135 |journal=Irish Historical Studies |volume=26 |issue=102 |pages=128–141 |doi=10.1017/S0021121400009627 |jstor=30008135 |url-access=subscription}}</ref><ref>{{cite journal|editor1-last=Gee|editor1-first=Henry|editor2-last=Hardy|editor2-first=William John|journal=Documents Illustrative of English Church History|location=New York|publisher=Macmillan|year=1896|pages=442–458|url=http://history.hanover.edu/texts/engref/er79.html|accessdate=23 March 2018|title=Elizabeth's Supremacy Act, Restoring Ancient Jurisdiction (1559), 1 Elizabeth, Cap. 1}}</ref> The new Oath of Supremacy that nobles were required to swear gave the Queen's title as ''supreme governor'' of the church rather than ''supreme head'', to avoid the charge that the monarchy was claiming divinity or usurping Christ, whom the Bible explicitly identifies as Head of the Church.
==List of supreme heads==
{| class="wikitable" |- ! Name ! Years ! Notes |- |Henry VIII |1531–1547 | |- |Edward VI |1547–1553 |With Thomas Cranmer, authorised the Book of Common Prayer. |- |Lady Jane Grey |1553 |Reign's legitimacy is disputed. |- |Mary I and Philip |1553–1555 |From 1554 the couple omitted the title, without statutory authority until authorised by Parliament in 1555. Promoted the Counter-Reformation in England, Wales and Ireland. |}
==References== {{Reflist}}
Category:Anglicanism Category:Caesaropapism Category:History of the Church of England Category:English monarchy Category:Church of England lists Category:16th century in England Category:16th-century Christianity Category:16th century in English law Category:1536 establishments in England
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