oddly enough Rome banned Christianity prosecuted hundreds if not thousands of christians, until oneday on the eve of a battle a general by the name of Constantine saw a crossin the sky and woke up his soldiers and told them to paint a cross on their shields, and then when they charged into battle they stood up in the battlefield victorious. later the capital of the now Holy Roman Empire became Constantinople.
We can not really say when the first Christians arrived in Rome, but Paul's Epistle to the Romans shows that there were already Christians in Rome during his lifetime. This Epistle is traditionally dated in the 50s of the first century CE.
With the acceptance and then formally making Christianity the religion of the Empire - beginning with Emperor Constantine in 325 AD.
Yes it did
IN Rome cuz Rome prepared the world for Christs coming to the earth
It started in Rome (Not the Middle East) and spread quickly.
Well as we know Rome is near the Tiber River so it was difficult for people to cross it to spread Christianity.
We do not know how or when Christianity first arrived in Rome, but Paul's Epistle to the Romans demonstrates a flourishing Christian community existed there when he proposed his visit to Rome, on his way to Spain.
He ended the persecution of Christians
It was Peter as he was crucified in Rome.
because jesus died for his beliefs
The spread of Christianity had political ramifications for the Roman Empire. The empire split into two, Constantinople to the east and Rome to the west
Alexandria,Antioch,Corinth,Ephesus,and Thessalonica
Horatius Cocles did not do anything to spread Christianity. Christianity did not even exist in his days. He was around 6th century B.C; that is, some five centuries before Jesus Christ.
The Edict of Milan helped spread Christianity by allowing all religions in Rome.