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Eastern Orthodoxy is one form of Christianity. Some more may be Roman Catholicism or Protestantism.
I assume you mean the official split into Eastern Orthodoxy and Roman Catholicism, which happened in 1054.
eastern orthodoxy was a church tranditions descending from the eastern roman empire, the leaders of the eastern orthodoxy were roma and the patriarch
This is a question which has divided Eastern Orthodoxy from Roman Catholicism and what might be called Western Christianity (the protestant churches plus Roman Catholicism). Eastern Orthodoxy holds that the Spirit proceeds from the Father alone, not from the Father and the Son - which is the belief of Western Christianity.
The Eastern Orthodox faith was established in 1054 with the Great Schism. At this time, the East split from the West and established two churches: Eastern Orthodoxy and Roman Catholicism.
The Orthodox Church as it is today was established at the Great Schism of 1054, when Christianity split into the East (Eastern Orthodoxy) and the West (Roman Catholicism).
Actually, St. Patrick lived before the schism between Greek (Eastern) Orthodoxy and Roman Catholicism, so both consider him a saint.
The Christian faith began after the ascension of Jesus Christ. It wasn't until the Great Schism of 1054 until two churches emerged: Eastern Orthodoxy and Roman Catholicism.
All together there are estimated at being around 33,000 different so called "Christian" denominations. The three major groups are the Eastern Orthodoxy, Roman Catholicism, and Protestantism.
Islam   45% Serb Orthodoxy   36% Roman Catholicism   15% Others   1%
There were too many to count. It depends on what part of the world you are looking at but the major players would have been Buhddism, Hinduism, Islam, Eastern Orthodoxy, the various Protostants, and Roman Catholicism.