24,99 €
inkl. MwSt.

Erscheint vorauss. 4. März 2025
payback
12 °P sammeln
  • Broschiertes Buch

Henry VIII of England's break with the Pope transformed a reasonable man into a tyrant, even to the point of killing his former chancellor Thomas More, his most faithful man, who did not bow to his demands, betraying his faith and the Catholic Church. How could this change have happened and what consequences did it have for his subjects and for a large part of the world? For some, Henry VIII remained a quasi-Catholic monarch, but he wanted ultimate power over his subjects and their consciences in order not to be judged by them. However, the supremacy of the king over the Church already had the…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
Henry VIII of England's break with the Pope transformed a reasonable man into a tyrant, even to the point of killing his former chancellor Thomas More, his most faithful man, who did not bow to his demands, betraying his faith and the Catholic Church. How could this change have happened and what consequences did it have for his subjects and for a large part of the world? For some, Henry VIII remained a quasi-Catholic monarch, but he wanted ultimate power over his subjects and their consciences in order not to be judged by them. However, the supremacy of the king over the Church already had the force of law since the Statute of Praemunire of 1393, so his action was not a real novelty imposed in 1534 by Henry VIII. Santiago Mata's historical work asks, among other things, whether it was only the need to guarantee a male succession that led Henry VIII to change sides. The answer remains a mystery, but according to its author, Henry VIII came to the conviction that the Church had to be destroyed and to achieve this, the political power had to be unique and omnipotent. Thus, in 1536, the king commissioned Lutheran theologians to design a religion that would suppress four sacraments (confirmation, anointing of the sick, priesthood and marriage). However, this religion was not imposed due to the popular rebellion known as the Pilgrimage of Grace. Santiago Mata demonstrates in his essay how the English Reformation not only moved away from Catholicism, but its main objective was to eliminate the Church. The history of the martyrs of England shows that a pseudo-ecclesial structure dependent on the State ends up disappearing, while the persecuted Church never dies. The martyrs did not seek to impose themselves or to be better than their persecutors. "Those men and women did not hesitate to sacrifice their lives in obedience to the voice of conscience and the will of God, bearing brilliant witness to human dignity and freedom". Paul VI, at the canonization of 40 of those martyrs, May 18, 1970.
Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Autorenporträt
Santiago Mata (Valladolid, 1965) es doctor en Historia, licenciado en Periodismo y profesor de enseñanza secundaria. Trabajó durante dos décadas en medios de comunicación y agencias en España, Eslovaquia y Austria. En 2007, como redactor de La Gaceta de los Negocios, destapó el robo de patrimonio subacuAtico español cometido por los cazatesoros de la empresa norteamericana Odyssey. Entre sus libros de historia destacan Leopoldo Eijo Garay, Ramon Llull, el hombre que demostró el cristianismo (2006), El Tren de la Muerte (2011), Holocausto católico (2013), El sueño de la Transición (2014), El arma submarina alemana (2015), Kriegsmarine. La Flota de Hitler (2017), Monseñor Óscar Romero, pasión por la Iglesia (2015) y El Yunque en España (2015). En 2017 escribió sobre la mal llamada Gripe Española cómo comenzó en Estados Unidos en 1917, y publicó las pruebas en Cómo el Ejército americano contagió al mundo la Gripe Española. En 2018 publicó Silencio en Garabandal. El precio pagado por la Virgen, sobre las supuestas apariciones marianas en aquella localidad cántabra. En esta editorial ha publicado El secreto de la Virgen de Guadalupe (2020) y Mártires cristianos bajo el nazismo (2022).