1054
The two churches were the Eastern Orthodox and the Roman Catholic
They were not. Both the Orthodox and Roman Catholics accept the decision of the Seventh Ecumenical Council which declared that the veneration of icons is essential in the Christian Church. The split (or schism) was due to other causes, such as Papal claims of supremacy, and the change to the Creed.
The oriental orthodox,eastern orthodox and roman catholic churches all started when various apostles spread mainly the middle east and eastern Europe. Soon the churches started to split the oriental orthodox then eastern orthodox and catholics together. Its hard to say when oriental orthodox started because it consists of several apostolic churches in communion which each other all founded at different times by different apostles
No, the Roman Empire had fallen about 600 years prior to the Great Schism.
The Christian Churches split 1.) Roman Catholic 2.)Eastern Orthodox The Cause was that the had different views. Roman Catholic wanted their mass in Latin while the Eastern churches wanted there Mass in Greek. They also fought because the catholics believed that the pope had power over all including the king and emperor. While the Orthodox believed that the Emperor has power over all.
The Orthodox Church is considered to have originated first, with roots tracing back to the early Christian communities in the Eastern Roman Empire. The Catholic Church developed later, with the Great Schism in 1054 leading to the split between the Eastern Orthodox Church and the Roman Catholic Church.
The Great Schism was between the Roman Catholic Church and the Eastern Orthodox Church (or Catholicism and Eastern Orthodox).
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 two Christian churches that developed after the split in 1054 are the Roman Catholic Church, based in Rome and headed by the Pope, and the Eastern Orthodox Church, which has its headquarters in Constantinople (modern-day Istanbul) and is led by various patriarchs.
No. Most of the saints prior to the Schism (split) in 1054 AD are in fact the same, but many of the ones after this period are not recognized by both the Orthodox and Catholics, but only by each individually.
In Catholic and Orthodox churches, the doctrine holding that the bread and wine of the Eucharist are transformed into the body and blood of Jesus, although their appearances remain the same. This view is generally not held by the majority of Protestant denominations. Even the members of the Anglican community are split on the issue.
If you are talking about the split when the Eastern Rites split into two with half remaining with the Church, and half forming the Orthodox Churches, I don't think it is permanent, just very long lasting.