In 1054 AD the leaders of each Church mutually excommunicated each other.
AnswerThe most-unlikely place to find Protestants would be in the Vatican, the headquarters of the Roman Catholic church. This is because the Romn catholic church was responsible for their separation from the Roman catholic church and subsequent formation in the first place.
This was not the case. The Emperor and his Council of Ministers ran the government, whereas the Ecumenical Patriarch and his Council/Synod of Bishops ran the church. Church and State were separate entities. Therefore, authority in the East Roman (Byzantine) Empire was not held by just one person.
The Byzantine Empire was able to recapture some of the western provinces of the Roman Empire. This reconquest took place from 533 to 548 under Justinian I.
Italy Parts of the western Roman Empire <--apex Africa
In the Middle Ages Constantinople was the capital of the Roman, Eastern Roman, Byzantine, Latin, and Ottoman was the capital of the Roman, Eastern Roman, Byzantine, Latin, and Ottoman Empires. Now a days changing capital is something countries dont do but Roman Emperor Constantine I identified the site of Byzantium as the capital because it was a safe place for a emperor to seat.
They are a place of worship and in the Roman Catholic Church, it is normally the place for doing the Sacrifice (Holy Communion).
No, Australia's politics has no bearing on religion and religion has no place in politics
The Byzantine Empire preserved the cultural heritage of the two place Greece and Rome.
The place was not sexist, had religious freedom, and had brotherly love.
the Eucharist is celebrated in a Church during a Roman Catholic Mass.
I think that you meant this: "Is it true that there is a place in the Bible that says you have to go to a specific church to go to. If so, where?" During the times that the Holy Bible is written about, the people followed Judaism, and were called Jews. There were no "denominations" or types of church like there are today. Jesus the Christ was a Jewish rabbi, or teacher, but it was a long time after His death that the first 'other' churches began, based on His teachings. The first was the Holy Catholic Church which soon split into the Roman Catholic church and the Byzantine Catholic church, (which is now represented by the Russian Orthodox church, the Greek Orthodox church, and others).
Though the byzantine empire was ruled by roman low and roman political institutions and the official language was latin, greek was widely spoken and students received education in greek history, literature and culture. And as the centuries went by, greek language took its place in the public administration of the byzantine empire alongside with the latin and in many occasions it substituted it.