To the best of my knowledge, the only country in Europe which broke away, as a Country, from the Catholic church, was England. I believe that Spain is still nominally Roman Catholic.
It ruled Europe so it was strong everywhere.
It's just Catholic, not Roman Catholic. Roman is an epithet first commonly used in England after the protestant revolt to describe the Catholic Church. It is never used by the official Catholic Church. That being said, historically, France, Spain, Portugal, and southern Europe, including Austria, southern Germany, Italy, along with Poland, Ireland, Malta, etc. were mostly Catholic. Before the protestant revolt, they were all Catholic.
before the 1500's all of western and southern Europe was mostly catholic. in the 1500's the Anglican church was created in England but France, Spain, and Italy still have catholicism as their main religion.
The dominant religion of Spain is the Roman Catholic Church.
it meant death to all who didn't except the doctrines of the catholic church
Catholic from fear of the roman Catholic church but after 1606 after new England Spain and France
Yes.
The principle religion anywhere in Spain is the Roman Catholic Church.
Most people in Spain belong to the Catholic Church. They are Catholics.
Paul H. Freedman has written: 'Church and society in the diocese of Vich in the twelfth century' -- subject(s): Spain Vich, Vich, Spain. (Diocese) 'The Diocese of Vic' -- subject(s): Catholic Church, Catholic Church. Diocese of Vich (Spain), Church history, History
The southern and western parts: France, Portugal, Spain, Austria, southern Germany, Italy, etc. Also Ireland remained predominately Catholic, although technically protestant as it was overun by the English at the time.
All religions are allowed in Spain, although the Roman Catholic Church is, by far, the most popular.