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Q: After the Great Schism the Byzantine church became known as the?
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What was the byzantine church called after the great schism?

After the Great Schism, the Byzantine church became known as the Eastern Orthodox Church. The west branch was known as the Roman Catholic Church.


How did the schism of 1054 affect the Byzantine Empire?

It is when The Roman Catholic Church and The Eastern Orthodox Church had The Great Schism, in which The Roman Catholic Church broke off The Orthodox Church.


How did the council of bishops in Rome feel about Byzantine views of Christianity?

The Roman Catholics were strongly opposed to some of the practices of the Byzantine Church, and vice versa. This tension resulted in the Great Schism, in which the Western and Eastern Church split.


What are the origins of Eastern Orthodox Church?

The Christians of the Byzantine Empire did not want to recognize the pope in Rome as their leader, so in 1054 they agreed to divide from the Catholic Church and form their own branch of Christianity. This divide was called the great schism.


What was it called when the Catholic church officially separated from the Catholic church?

This is called a schism the most famous being the Great Schism.


What was the break of the catholic church called?

The Great Schism


What did the western church become known as after 1054?

The western church became known as the Roman Catholic Church after the Great Schism of 1054. This schism divided Christianity into two branches: the Western Church, led by the Pope in Rome, and the Eastern Church, known as the Orthodox Church, headed by the Patriarchs of Constantinople.


What is a split that occurred within the Catholic Church that resulted in two separate churches Eastern Orthodox and Catholicism in 1047?

You're thinking of the Eastern Schism, sometimes called the Great Schism, but in the Catholic Church, the Great Schism refers to the Western Schism in the 15th century, not the Eastern Schism in the 11th century.


What religious group was formed from the schism of the Catholic Church?

The Great Schism, or East-West Schism, in the Catholic Church, produced the Eastern Orthodox Church, in the East, and the Roman Catholic Church, in the West. Both claimed to be continuations of the original Church. There is an article at the link below.


What was the great schism for the Christians about?

The Great Schism was in 1054 between the Roman (Latin) Church in Italy and the Byzantine (Greek) Church in modern Turkey today. The Christian Church split along doctrine, theology, language, politics, and geography. This would eventually lead to the development of the Roman Catholic and Eastern Orthodox churches. Another famous schism was in 1378 AD when there were 2 Popes - an Italian named Urban VI and a Frenchman named Clement the VII. It took 40 years to fix this split.


What were the results of the schism from the Roman Catholic Church?

Roman Catholic AnswerThere were two "schisms" that are commonly referred to when speaking of the church. The Western Schism or Great Schism was not a true schism but refers to the time in the late 14 century when the Pope moved to Avignon and another pseudo-Pope was elected in Rome; at one time, before the end of this disaster there were three "popes". The Schism of the East, which was a true schism, resulted in the Orthodox Church separating from the Catholic Church in 1054. This schism has been an off again, on again thing through the centuries and is a great heartbreak for the Church.


Cultural differences between Roman Catholics and Byzantine Christians contributed to the?

Cultural differences between Roman Catholics and Byzantine Christians contributed to the