After Henry VIII broke the CoE from the Catholic Church, many in Britain developed severe anti-Catholic hatred.
King Henry VIII did something far worse and more deadly than the Eastern Orthodox. Namely, he put people to death who did not submit to him, that he was head of the church, by an act of parliament, and the law. He did it for power and vanity. He went through enumerable wives and relationships through the parliamentary process to declaring him head of the Church, in order to divorce and disband the King’s Coronation oath. Which thus also put at front against the Magna Carta. He was, in other words, a tyrant.
But so are every sinner who falls into sin and justifies it. I am included. But, when we fall, the best thing is to get up, go to Christ in His Church, and seek reconciliation as the Prodigal Son sought his father out. Which, sadly, King Henry VIII, nor Judas Iscariot seek out. Both ended in a terrible death. One from sexual sins. The other from despair.
The rupture by the Anglican church, sadly, put a precedent in English history. But, one thing noble did stand. Queen Victoria. Not a perfect queen (as if there were in the history of the world, a perfect queen in human terms.) But, nonetheless, she brought the dignity and respect to woman back into the realm. Wherefore King Henry’s legacy did not. She was quite reasonably a rebellious queen to his legacy. My view of Queen Victoria is that she showed the sign of reconciliation, humility, and recovery of the English soul. It was in the Victorian age, the Oxford movement and John Henry Newman. It was the progeny that led to Hllaire Belloc and G.K. Chesterton. And of course Charles Dickens.
The best of England, I believe, came out of the Victorian era. Women were more celebrated and dignified. Certainly could had been afforded more rights. But, nonetheless, as men wore wigs in both Parliament and Magistration. For men wore those wigs to symbolize how often women who are outside of the affairs of men (i.e. not being caught up and involved in their brutish exercises) often have a far better judgement and opinion than men have. For it is because women had stayed out of politics, they did not sell their souls to the devil as men were oft to do. Thus, why they wore wigs celebrating that women served better a judgement than men have.