Please specify which split you are referring to.
There were quite a few
There were no other Christian religions in medieval times. All Christian nations were Christian and still attending the Church that Christ founded.
no
near the start of the medieval period, religion held power over everyone's lives, after a few Schims and important people who preached against the church, like John Huss, the papacy weakened. Religion weakened alot. If you are looking for the types of religion, the europeans were mainly Roman Catholic Church
The Christian Church was probably the most important influence on the minds of medieval European people.
The term Medieval Church could be construed to apply to the Christian religion. It could also apply to a church organization dominating a given area. So the Church of Rome dominated the Roman Empire of the fifth century, The Eastern Orthodox dominated the eastern parts of Christian Europe after the Great Schism of 1054, just as the Roman Catholic Church dominate the West, and each of these might be referred to as the Church in those areas.
Christian Antz has written: 'Sieben Dome' -- subject(s): Medieval Architecture, Guidebooks, Dom, Church architecture, Cathedrals, Church decoration and ornament 'Sacrum theatrum Romanum'
I would consider many since the christian church was mostly in power during that time.
The Catholic Church was split in 1054 in the East-West Schism, into the Roman Catholic Church, in the West, and the Eastern Orthodox Church. The reason for this split was a disagreement over what authority the pope had in eastern dioceses. Put simply, the Western Church held the pope was a ruling authority, but the Eastern Church would only accept the pope as a symbolic authority. You should remember that there were other Churches aside from the Catholic Church at the time, including the Oriental Orthodox, Coptic Orthodox, and others, so the entire Christian Church was not involved. There is a link below that you can use for more information. The most important dispute that split the Church was over the supremacy of the Pope, versus the independence of the bishops, particularly of the East. This produced the East-West Schism of 1054, which divided the largest body of the Church into the Roman Catholic Church, in the West, and the Eastern Orthodox Church, in the East. There is a link below.
the religon was roman christian and people like nuns devoted their lives to the church. the people such as pesants all had this same religon and believed and worshiped the same god. all people payed the chirch and were living bytheir religous beleifs.
J. van Herwaarden has written: 'Opgelegde bedevaarten' -- subject(s): Christian pilgrims and pilgrimages, Church history, Medieval Travel, Travel, Medieval 'Pelgrimstochten' -- subject(s): Christian pilgrims and pilgrimages
The dispute that led to the founding of the African Methodist episcopal church was the doctrine of segregation. When St. George's Methodist church was segregated, it triggered the dispute.