in
Ravenna, Italy combines Western and Byzantine elements.
Justinian I conquered the Italian peninsula in the
Gothic War (535–554) and
appointed the next three popes, a practice that would be continued by his successors and would later be delegated to the
Exarchate of Ravenna. The
Byzantine Papacy was a period of
Byzantine domination of the
papacy from 537 to 752, when popes required the approval of the
Byzantine Emperor for
episcopal consecration, and many popes were chosen from the
apocrisiarii (diplomatic envoys from the pope to the emperor) or from the inhabitants of
Byzantine Greece,
Byzantine Syria, or
Byzantine Sicily. In the
Latin West, medieval secular rulers vied with the
papacy for overall power, notably in the
Investiture Controversy of the 11th and 12th centuries and in the struggles between
Guelphs and Ghibellines from the 12th to the 14th centuries, but neither the
German Kings nor the
Holy Roman Emperors ever succeeded in establishing any long-term dominance over the
Vatican. Emperors could at times exert influence over the election of
Bishops of Rome, they could claim the right () to veto a papal candidate (last
exercised in 1903 by
His Imperial and Royal Apostolic Majesty The Emperor of Austria, Apostolic King of Hungary), or they could support rival
antipopes. "Conquering kings" (the
Theophylacti between the 10th and 12th centuries,
Napoleon I in 1809,
Victor Emmanuel II in 1870, for example) could curb a Pope's
political rule, but they could not reliably control the Holy Father, and the papacy generally asserted and maintained its spiritual independence from secular control. In protestant regions in the
Holy Roman Empire, the princes had the and remained in control until the introduction of the
Weimar Constitution in 1919.
Anglican Communion During the dispute between King
Henry VIII of England and
Pope Clement VII over Henry's wish to have his marriage to
Catherine of Aragon annulled, the
English Parliament passed the
Act in Restraint of Appeals (1533). It stated: The next year Parliament passed the
First Act of Supremacy (1534) that explicitly tied the head of church to the imperial crown of England: The
Crown of Ireland Act, passed by the Irish Parliament in 1541 (effective 1542), changed the traditional title used by the Monarchs of England for the reign over Ireland, from
Lord of Ireland to
King of Ireland and named Henry head of the
Church of Ireland, for similar reasons. During the rule of Queen
Mary I of England (), the First Act of Supremacy was annulled, but during the reign of Queen
Elizabeth I the
Second Act of Supremacy, with similar wording to the First Act, was passed in 1559. During the
English Interregnum of 1649 to 1660 the
laws were annulled, but the acts which caused the laws to be in abeyance were themselves deemed null and void by the Parliaments of the
English Restoration from 1660 onwards. When Elizabeth I restored royal supremacy, she replaced the title
"Supreme Head" with that of
"Supreme Governor", a conciliatory change designed to mollify English Catholics and the more radical of the English Protestants. According to
Nicholas Sanders ( - 1581), however: "The Queen lays down for her clergy a rule of life, outside of which they dare not move, not only in those things which Protestants call indifferent, but in all matters of Faith, discipline, and doctrine, in virtue of that supreme spiritual power with which she is invested: she suspends her bishops when she pleases, she grants a license to preach, either to those who are ordained according to her rite or to simple laymen, in the same way at her pleasure reduces those whom she will to silence. To show her authority in these things, she occasionally, from her closet, addresses her preacher, and interrupts him in the presence of a large congregation, in some such way as this: 'Mr. Doctor, you are wandering from the text, and talking nonsense. Return to your subject. Since 1559, the royal monarchs of England, of Great Britain, and of the United Kingdom have claimed the "Supreme Governor" status as well as the title of
"Defender of the Faith" (which was originally bestowed on Henry VIII by
Pope Leo X but later revoked by
Pope Paul III, as that was originally an award for Henry VIII's 1521 anti-Lutheran treatise
Defence of the Seven Sacraments). Despite his continued persecution of both Catholic
Recusants and
English Dissenters,
King James I () preferred not to do anything else that might otherwise encourage factional strife within the
Anglican Communion. His son and heir,
King Charles I (), through his insistence upon promoting the
High-Church reforms advocated by the
Caroline Divines and by Archbishop
William Laud, alienated opponents of
Anglo-Catholicism and lost his throne in the course of the
English Civil War of 1642-1651. The
1688 overthrow of the
House of Stuart was caused by the efforts of
King James II () to partially annul the Act of Supremacy by granting
Catholic Emancipation more than two hundred years before
Daniel O'Connell. As many Anglicans saw James's attempts as in violation of the King's
Coronation Oath, Parliament blocked every bill, which caused the King to simply order Catholic Emancipation into effect using his
Royal Prerogative. In response, Parliament successfully invited the King's son-in-law,
William of Orange to invade England and to take the throne. Even though King James II and his exiled heirs remained Catholics, their overthrow divided the
Anglican Communion in what is now known as the
Non-juring schism. Anglican
Jacobites, or Non-Jurors, embraced the
Anglo-Catholicism advanced by the Stuart monarchs between 1603 and 1688. During each of the
Jacobite risings, Non-Juring Anglican chaplains accompanied the Jacobite armies. The schism faded following the 1788 death of Prince
Charles Edward Stuart and the inheritance of his claim to the throne by his younger brother, Prince
Henry Benedict Stuart, a
Catholic priest and Cardinal. ==In popular culture==