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In the past two thousand years, Catholic missionaries have taught in every part of the world except probably Antarctica.
This is a gross oversimplification, but then your question really isn't specific enough for anything else. Catholic missionaries preached the Gospel, and lived it. Catholic priests, brothers, and nuns went into many lands and accepted the culture for what it was, then then tried to find elements in it that would make sense to the Gospel, and preached from that. They also took care of the sick, built schools and hospitals, etc. Protestant missionaries give out the Bible, to this day, and try to fit the people that they are preaching to into their mold of what Christianity looks like to them "back home".
The Pacific Ocean lies between Asia and the Americas.
The spread of Buddhism begins when Emperor Ashoka sent missionaries to India during the third century BC. This mission became a success and later on becoming the center of Buddhism.
Exchange of goods and ideas between the continents of Europe, Asia, Africa, and the Americas. A sought-after direct water route to Asia through the Americas.
Christopher Columbus never got to Asia he thought he was in Asia but he was in the Americas
North Americas Asia
Missionaries
The Silk Road
The first Catholic missionary to Asia was John of Montecorvino, born in Italy in 1247. He became a Franciscan friar and went to the Middle East, then on to India around 1292. After a year in India, he journeyed to China.
vasco balboa
Corn (in the Americas) Hinduism (in Asia)