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The Council that initiated the Catholic Reformation, also known as the Counter-Reformation, was the Council of Trent. It was convened by the Catholic Church in response to the Protestant Reformation and took place from 1545 to 1563. This Council addressed doctrinal and disciplinary reforms within the Church.
The 16th century after the Protestant reformation and the ensuing Catholic counter-reformation that took shape during the Council of Trent (1545-64).
No. The Scottish Reformation took place in 1560.
During the 16th century, the Protestant Reformation led to the establishment of the Church of England and several other denominations. There was a rivalry between Catholic Spain and Protestant England.
A lessening of the power of the Catholic Church.Another answerHenry the 8th changed and took over the Catholic church in England, changing it to Protestant in order to divorce and remarry until he received what he wanted. Most of the country became Protestant. Henry started off as a very strong Catholic and ended up as a Protestant but still liked the catholic ways. After his death, Edward was a Protestant in order to be king. Mary was a strong Catholic and so wanted to change the country back to being Catholic, but there was no point as Elizabeth was a strong Protestant and so would change it all back again.
The Council of Trent took place in Trento, Italy, between the years 1545 and 1563. It was an important ecumenical council of the Catholic Church that addressed issues related to the Protestant Reformation.
The Protestant Reformation began in 1517 with Martin Luther published his 95 Theses; it's inception began many decades into the 16th century. The time period of the Protestant Reformation is 1577 - Present, as it is ongoing today.
The renaissance The protestant reformation The discovery of the New World The enlightenment The french revolution
The counter reformation took place in the 16th century in the HRE (Holy Roman Empire)
It took place within the Catholic Churches controled by the See of Rome. This included all Catholic congregations in schism with the papacy over the 1517 Papal Bull issued against the Catholic Council of Bishops; removing them from their authority over dogma and doctrine within Western-Catholicism. Many Catholic congregations converted to Evangelical Protestant or Reformed theologies throughout Europe. Germanic, Frankish, Celtic, and Scandinavian trides controlled by the Holy Roman Empire consisted of Evangelical Protestant and Reformed congregations converting from papal authority to a more recognizable continuance of Catholicism within these newly named Church bodies.
The Puritan Reformation took place in England in the 16th and 17th centuries. It was a movement within the Church of England that sought to purify the church of Roman Catholic practices and establish a more simplified and moral form of worship.
the spread of religious conflict in europe