The best answer is C. in 1533 Henry VIII made himself head of the Church in Egland, although at the time he left religious services essentially unchanged.
The English Reformation varied from those in other countries because the actions of Henry VIII were taken from stately, personal, and religious reasons rather than those of pure theology like Luther and Calvin. Henry VIII used his status as head of the English Church to set his marriage affairs in order and to confiscate the wealth of Catholic churches in England, but he left religious matters virtually untouched making the changes of the English Reformation initially more secular in nature.
The philosopher Jon Locke continuously refers to the laws of nature as being immutable--meaning that they cannot be altered or restrained by any person or political body.
Ireland
through most of 17th c. the main settlers came from England with Wales and Scotland, Irish started to settle in the late 17th c.
Hey!
There is not a lot of solid information on Osman I who established the Ottoman dynasty around 1300 CE. He was the hereditary leader of a small principality in Anatolia.
Hippocrates had a number of medical achievements such as he systematized medicine,he founded antiquity's greatest school of physicians,he invented the famous. Hippocratic Oath, and he and his followers wrote a large body of medical literature.