there was none
Christian Church
The strongest civilizing force in Europe during the early Middle Ages was the Church.
In the Early Middle Ages, and in the rest of the middle ages in the West, the Pope was most powerful. In the later middle ages in the East, it was the Patriarch of Constantinople.
The Catholic church was the "state" and ruled the society of the middle ages.
Robert Brentano has written: 'A new world in a small place' -- subject(s): Catholic Church, Catholic Church. Diocese of Rieti, Catholic Church. Diocese of Rieti (Italy), Church history, History 'An outline of the age of Renaissance' -- subject(s): Renaissance, Outlines, syllabi 'The early Middle Ages, 500-1000' -- subject(s): Sources, Middle Ages, History 'The early Middle Ages, 500-1000' -- subject(s): Sources, Middle Ages, History
no, try googling the crusades and/or the spanish inquisition
The only church in the Middle Ages was the Catholic Church. I am not sure what the question is asking about the church.
The Magna Carta contributed the the growing of the church in the Middle Ages.
The three stages of knight hood were a page then a squire then finally you were a knight.
In the Middle Ages, every village, town, and city had a church. In fact, the presence of a church was what distinguished a village from a hamlet.
The catholic church.
The church in the middle ages experienced turmoil because it was no longer unified. Disagreements and splintering of the church caused the church to shatter.