After the Great Schism, the Byzantine church became known as the Eastern Orthodox Church. The west branch was known as the Roman Catholic Church.
When the schism came to a close, near the time of the Council of Constantine, three popes where vying for the official position: Gregory XII- Roman Catholic Church Benedict XIII- French Catholic Church John XXIII- German Catholic Church
it was always faith
Bibles were copied by a variety of monastic organizations that were especially set up for the purpose, but there was no one group that did this. There was not even one Church that did it. The Book of Kells was a product of a Celtic Orthodox Church that was only loosely affiliated with the Roman Church, and there were other Churches, notably the Oriental Orthodox and Coptic Orthodox Churches, which did copied their own Bibles. After the Great Schism of 1054, the Eastern Orthodox Church maintained bible production in Greek and the Roman Catholic Church did it in Latin.
The crusades The Great Schism The Black Plague The Hundred Years War (crossbows easily defeated knights)
The Great Schism of 1054 occurred among the Christians of Eastern and Western Roman Empire.
in the year 1054 AD
The East-West Schism of 1054 sometimes known as the Schism of the East.
The Coptic Church is a branch of the Orthodox Church with whom a schism has existed since the year 1054.
The Great Schism of 1054 and the Split of Christianity
The schism in the Christian Church (A.D. 1054) brought about two groups - the Catholic Church and the Orthodox Church in the East.
It is called the East-West Schism of 1054.
The East-West Schism, or the Photian Schism (so named because it was provoked by Photius, the Archbishop of Constantinople).
Venance Grumel has written: 'The schism of Michael Cerularius in 1054' -- subject(s): Eastern and Western Church, Schism
It is when The Roman Catholic Church and The Eastern Orthodox Church had The Great Schism, in which The Roman Catholic Church broke off The Orthodox Church.
The Great Schism occurred in 1054, separating Christendom into two halves. The East became Eastern Orthodox and the West became Roman Catholic.
Pope Leo IX was the pope whose actions resulted in the Great East-West Schism of 1054.