Henry VIII
- Wanted divorce but forbidden by Pope
- Tried Cardinal Wolsey for Praeminure
- Thomas Cromwell and Thomas More competed for influence
- Acts of Supremacy - 1534
- Thomas More put to death for opposition to Henry
Praeminure, the crime for which Cardinal Wosley and many others were accused of and tried for, is the recognition of an authority other than the monarch of England. After Wolsey's death Cromwell, a Protestant, and More, a Catholic would compete for influence over Henry VIII and the direction of reform within the English church. The Acts of Supremacy, passed by the Reformation Parliament in 1534 made Henry VIII the supreme head of the state and the church, officially rejecting the authority of the Pope. Thomas More was executed for his refusal to let go of papal authority and recognize Henry VIII as the head of the Church and for his opposition to the marriage between Henry and Anne Boleyn.