Pope Gregory I, also known as Gregory the Great.
Lots of people, Kings, Bishops, Cardinals, Popes, abbots, etc.
Roman Catholic AnswerIn different centuries, missionaries came from different countries to convert Europe. A lot of them originated in Rome and Italy, St. Augustine converted England, and later St. Patrick converted Ireland. Ireland, however, send missionaries all over Europe and the world for many centuries. Here in the United States, the last wave of Irish priests that came to serve are just now approaching retirement.
Jesus
Yes! Duriong the Roamn Empire,the first missionaries of the church is Saint Paul and Peter and the following Pope after him.Also, during the time when Europe was fallen to the Barbarians.Patrick,Angshar,Augustine of Canterbury,Boniface are the main missionaries at this time
A number of religious orders helped spread Catholicism. The Benedictines were instrumental in civilizing and spreading Catholicism all through Europe. The Jesuits, Franciscans, and Dominicans were primarily educators and missionaries for most of their history.
There was no significance to missionaries since there were no missionaries. All of Europe was Catholic and people didn't travel outside Europe until the late 1400's so a missionary wasn't needed to convert people.
It would be different forms of Christianity. French, Spanish, and Portuguese missionaries would spread Catholicism. British, Dutch, Swedish, Danish, and German missionaries would carry different forms of Protestant faith (such as Anglican, Methodist, Moravian, Lutheran, and Reformed).
Missionaries from the Christian part of Europe traveled to those countries to convert the pagans.
There is no significance to missionaries because they didn't exist. The whole of Europe was Catholic and travel outside of Europe didn't happen until the late 1400's so people didn't need missionaries to convert people.___Not all of Europe was Christian. Missionaries were sent out by the Church to convert the remaining areas like pockets in Scandanavia. John of Montecorvino went to China and established a mission in Peking in the early 1300's.
Missionaries come from all over the world.
Catholicism.
There was no impact of missionaries because there was no missionaries. Europe was all Catholic and travel outside of Europe didn't happen until the late 1400's so no missionaries were needed.
In western Europe it was Catholicism. When the whole of this area was converted to Catholicism it was itself as Christendom.