No, many people were very against it. Many Jews hated Jesus since they didn't believe that he was actually the son of God, even though some of those Jews had seen him do miracles. They were also angry because large groups of people who had followed the Pharisees(the religious leaders of the time) changed to follow Jesus. These Jews that hated Jesus appealed to the Roman government and ended up getting Jesus crucified. After Jesus was crucified, then rose from the dead, then went back to heaven, his disciples (closest group of followers) were still on earth. Many of them were also killed or put in jail for sharing about Jesus. At the time preaching that Jesus was the son of God was almost like a death wish in many towns. All this is not to say that there were no Christians or even few Christians, just that all people did not accept Christianity.
The Romans Crucified the main exponent so the answer must be NO!
Vandals.
Clovis
The two main ones were Mithraism and Christianity.
Armenians are the most ancient nation in the world and they were the first to accept christianity!
If you mean religion, Armenians by majority are Orthodox Christian. They were the first nation to accept Christianity.
Yes. Armenia was the first country to accept Christianity as a state religion.
Christianity, but not neccessarily catholicism, which was the first form of Christianity
Metal and Christianity
Paganism predates Christianity by thousands of years. Paganism refers to a broad set of traditional, polytheistic spiritual beliefs and practices that were widespread in pre-Christian societies. Christianity emerged later in the first century AD with the teachings of Jesus Christ.
yea they did
he said that he would bring gold and spices from the new world. King Ferdinand and Queen Isabella (espically the queen) wanted to spread Christianity. Before Christopher Columbus's first expedition to the New World, the Islamic people had just been completely driven out. The queen wanted millions of other people to be saved and accept Christianity and Jesus Christ.