Answer: Glorious Revolution
Step-by-step explanation:
The Divine right of Kings was a notion that was prevalent in England pre-1688 that asserted that the Monarch was appointed by God and as such was subject to no earthly power thereby giving the throne both political and religious legitimacy.
In the Glorious Revolution of 1688, King James II who was a Catholic was deposed in favor of his daughter Mary who was a Protestant and her Dutch husband, William of Orange. One of the reasons for this revolution was King James's resistance to Parliament as he viewed them as hostile towards him so much so that he dissolved Parliament in 1687 so that he could instil a more agreeably Parliament.
After he was removed, the Convention Parliament met and drew concessions from the new monarchs that put the English crown under more restrictions than ever before which essentially ended the notion of the Divine Right of Kings.