Portugal, Spain, and Italy remained Catholic.
The Catholic Reformation was a period of Catholic revival.
The Reformation had a significant impact on the Catholic Church by leading to the division of Christianity into different branches, such as Protestantism. This movement challenged the authority and practices of the Catholic Church, leading to reforms within the church itself. The Reformation also resulted in a decline in the power and influence of the Catholic Church in some regions of Europe.
No. The Scottish Reformation took place in 1560.
The Catholic Reformation and the counter reformation are two expressions for the same thing.
The Catholic Church's response to the Reformation was known as the Counter-Reformation.
It brought more religions to the country (catholic and protestant) and there was a tension between the Catholic and protestant.<3
Because Spain had the "most Catholic monarchs" who sought to preserve the faith in their country unspotted by protestant heretics.
The catholic reformation created a few different things. The main things that the catholic reformation created new religious orders and reform the catholic church to rejoin.
Roman Catholic AnswerThe political impact of the protestant revolt was what scholars call the Counter-Reformation or the Catholic Reformation.
Christopher Columbus was Catholic, and so was his country, Spain.
Mostly Protestant mainly Lutheran a small minority is Roman Catholic, before the Protestant Reformation it was a Catholic country.