. Historical portraits ... sputes of an official kind arose between them, their personalrelations seem to have remained amicable and even cordial. LikeWolsey, Warham was no persecutor, and seems to have thought verylittle of complaints that were often made to him of the increase ofheresy: thus on one occasion he protected Colet, who was in realdanger from his diocesan of London. Warham was obliged,probably against his will, to manifest an interest in Henrysproceedings for the divorce, and sat on various commissions inconnexion with it; and it seems probable that he really believedthe union wit


. Historical portraits ... sputes of an official kind arose between them, their personalrelations seem to have remained amicable and even cordial. LikeWolsey, Warham was no persecutor, and seems to have thought verylittle of complaints that were often made to him of the increase ofheresy: thus on one occasion he protected Colet, who was in realdanger from his diocesan of London. Warham was obliged,probably against his will, to manifest an interest in Henrysproceedings for the divorce, and sat on various commissions inconnexion with it; and it seems probable that he really believedthe union with Katharine to be an unlawful one. In the Parlia-ment which met in 1529, Warham, now a very old man, was not I 2 ii6 WILLIAM WARHAM in a position to make much resistance to the ecclesiastical changesproposed, but it was he who, in 1531, suggested to Convocationto accept the proposed Royal title of * Head of the Church withthe amendment quantum per Christi legem licet. He died in1532, and was buried in Canterbury


Size: 1652px × 1512px
Photo credit: © Reading Room 2020 / Alamy / Afripics
License: Licensed
Model Released: No

Keywords: ., boo, bookcentury1900, bookdecade1900, booksubjectportraitpainting