There are two Monarchs known for trying to return England to Catholicism, Queen Mary I, who did bring the Church of England back into the Catholic Church, and King James II & VII who opened talks with the Pope to bring the Church of England back into the Catholic Church before he was over thrown in the Glorious Revolution. Also John Henry Cardinal Newman converted to Catholicism in the nineteenth century and did a wonderful job of explaining Catholicism to Anglicans.
No Normans did
Yes
the Romans brought Christianity to England in in the great invasion of 55 AD.
Water proof items and normal clothes
Harald hardraada wanted to bring England back to the way it was when the vikings first ruled England he also wanted to bring back the way life was like with king Canute.
Mary Tudor, daughter of Henry VIII, became Queen Mary I in 1553. Nicknamed "Bloody Mary" for the wars and religious persecutions, Mary was a devout Catholic who attempted (unsuccessfully) to bring Roman Catholicism back to being the official religion of England. (Her father, Henry VIII, had broken away from the Catholic church over the matter of his divorce from Catherine of Aragon.)
False
He Converted back to Catholicism
He convented back to Catholicism
Catholicism
Themselves.
There were many religious tensions. Her father had changed the country away from Catholicism and her sister tried to bring it back.
Christianity
William the Conqueror did not bring Catholicism to England, as Christianity had already been established in the country since the early medieval period. However, his conquest in 1066 significantly strengthened the influence of the Roman Catholic Church in England. William worked closely with the Church, reforming ecclesiastical structures and promoting the appointment of Norman bishops, which aligned English practices more closely with those of continental Europe. This laid the groundwork for greater integration of English religious practices with the broader Catholic Church.
None that were not already here. Catholicism.
Henri IV
Christianity, particularly Catholicism.