Article 37 makes this claim to royal supremacy more explicit:
All four were tried for the denial of the royal supremacy.
Nevertheless, he was suspected of disliking the royal supremacy.
He created another set of institutions that gave a clear structure to the royal supremacy.
All four were examined together and charged for their denial of the royal supremacy.
Bigod also translated some Latin works, and, during the insurrection, wrote against the royal supremacy.
Here again Suger was reasserting royal supremacy in a world which had long been deaf to such claims.
He was soon at work for Cromwell's propaganda machine, creating images in support of the royal supremacy.
The king and the bishops compelled him to write pamphlets on the subject of the day, the royal supremacy.
On the following day a new bill for royal supremacy was moved.