Istanbul,Turkey
Eastern Orthodox Christianity is practiced in eastern Europe and its diaspora communities. Some major Eastern Orthodox countries include Greece and Russia.
Orthodoxy is practiced throughout the whole world today.
all over the world
greece
* Episcopalian * Eastern Orthodox * Eastern Catholicism * Ethiopian Orthodox * Egyptian Orthodox * Egyptian Catholic * Estonian Orthodox * Ebionites (no adherents today) * Elkasites (a sub-group of Ebionites) * Essenes (no adherents today)
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).
Roman religion died out nearly 2,000 years ago and we do not use it today. What we have inherited form the Romans are Catholic and Orthodox Christianity. Christianity spread around the Roman Empire and developed into the Catholic and Orthodox creeds in the Roman days. The former was the religion of the western part of the Roman Empire and the latter was the religion of the eastern part of the Roman Empire.
Ninety-seven percent are Eastern Orthodox.
yes they are
The Orthodox Church.
Today most of Italy is Roman Catholic and Greece is mostly Greek Orthodox.
If you are talking about thousands of years ago, it would be the ancient Greeks and their polytheistic pantheon of Gods. You might recognize them by their Greek names or the Roman names they were later given, such as Zeus (Jupiter), Aphrodite (Venus), Hades (Pluto), and Apollo. Today, though, Greeks are about 97 percent Greek Orthodox (though a number of Catholics, Jews, Muslims, and even modern adherents to the classical Greek mythology above exist under the freedom of religion the country enjoys).
Zoroastrianism, once the religion of Persia, is primarily now found in India.
its found all around the world also known as universal
Mainly in India
The Romanian Orthodox Church was established in 1872. There are over twelve thousand priests and 400 monasteries in Romania today.