It allowed critics of the Catholic Church to make copies of their writings more easily.
Before the invention of the printing press, Bibles had to be copied painstakingly by hand. After the press was introduced, the Roman Catholic Church was able to spread its message farther and faster with printed copies of Bibles.
i need help. :l
^^ A machine that transfers lettering or images by contact with various forms of inked surface onto paper or similar material fed into it in various ways The device is used for printing many copies of a text on paper. ... i hoped that helped (:
it allowed critics of the Catholic Church to make copies of their writings more easily.
YOU ARE DUMB.
^^^ no, you sir are the dumb one. it helped to promote the ideas of the protestants without having each person to tell another by hear say.
It allowed critics of the Catholic Church to make copies of their writings more easily.
idont bno
Critics of the catholic church were able to quickly replace writings destroyed by the catholic church
The Printing Press
Sale of Indulgences main one, may have been resolved in church council or debate, were it not for the invention of the printing press.
It started with Martin Luther speaking out against the Roman Catholic churchOne event that began the Reformation is that Martin Luther posted theses when the printing press came into use.
it translated the bible and let news get around faster almost like first news paper
The printing press allowed for widespread distribution of information, ideas, and criticisms of the Catholic Church, reducing the Church's control over the spread of knowledge and challenging its authority. This made it increasingly difficult for the Church to suppress dissent and control the narrative during the revolution.
The Bible became more easily available through the printing press and easing of restrictions on reading the Bible, imposed by the ruling Roman Catholic Church at that time.
APEX: The Catholic Church had previously controlled the copy and distribution of printed materials
.Roman Catholic AnswerGreat heavens, NO. The Catholic Church has been printing the Holy Bible since the invention of a printing press, and for the fourteen centuries before that, thousands of monks spent their whole lives making new Bibles. Keep in mind that it was the Catholic Church that wrote and approved the Bible to begin with. Without the Catholic Church there would be no Bible today, and certainly would have been none around for the protestants to mutilate. As it is, M. Luther removed seven books from the Bible, and tried mightily to alter the New Testament as well, he was foiled in the later attempt by other heretics. The only printing of Holy Bibles that the Church objected to were error filled books claiming to be the complete Bible. Please see the link below for more:
you are dumb ^^^ no, you sir are the dumb one. it helped to promote the ideas of the protestants without having each person to tell another by hear say.
Critics of the catholic church were able to quickly replace writings destroyed by the catholic church
The printing press made it easier and faster to produce books, leading to a greater variety of ideas and writings being circulated. This challenged the Catholic Church's control over what books were published because it allowed for dissenting or alternative views to be spread more widely and quickly, weakening the church's authority in deciding what information was accessible to the public.
No
No, the Catholic Church did not really stifle medieval literature. There was a reason for this, which was that the literature during the middle ages was copied by hand or memorized, and the church could not really control individual writing literature easily prior to the invention of the printing press. The Catholic Church did stifle preaching, but that was a matter of something happening in public.
H. Fayollat has written: 'L' Apostolat de la presse' -- subject(s): Catholic Church, Catholic Press, Church and the press, Controversial literature, Press, Catholic
Martin Luther discovered the catholic church and theological
The Printing Press