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  1. Jul 17, 2018 · The wikipedia page about Gregory I also states that he was a "Pope of the Catholic Church from 3 September 590 to 12 March 604 AD". Technically, at that time before the Great Schism, there were no major denominations in the Christian church. For example, the pope should be considered the Patriarch of Rome, equal with the other patriarchs.

  2. 4 days ago · The severest difficulties faced by the medieval church involved the papacy. The most extreme and inflexible advocate of papal authority, Boniface VIII, initiated a struggle with the French king, Philip IV, over Philip’s attempts to tax and judge the clergy. After Boniface issued the bull Unam sanctam (“One Holy”), which asserted the unity ...

  3. The Great Schism of 1054 was the splitting point between Western Catholic Church and the Eastern Orthodox Church. The Schism itself was the culmination of centuries of theological disputes between these two branches of Christianity. The disputes had existed since the initial centuries of Christianity but it was in the 1054 Schism that leaders ...

  4. Oct 16, 2003 · The Schism. Melvyn Bragg discusses events surrounding the 11th century division of medieval Christendom into what became the Eastern Orthodox Church and the Roman Catholic Church. Show more ...

  5. Two Popes at One Time. The Western Great Schism began on September 20, 1378 with the election of Clement VII in Avignon, France. He was the second pope elected by the same college of cardinals in six months, and for the first time in history there were two "legitimate" claimants to be head of the church in Rome. Ad:

  6. Nov 9, 2022 · According to the Eastern Orthodox Church, there have been seven legitimate councils. The Roman Catholic Church accepts 21. The Orthodox Church disagreed with the content of the eighth council, and so it was viewed as illegitimate. After the Great Schism, the Catholic Church continued to have councils, which the Orthodox Church doesn’t recognize.

  7. The Great Schism, also called the East-West Schism, divided Christendom into Western (Latin) and Eastern (Greek) branches, which then became the Roman Catholic Church and the Eastern Orthodox Church, respectively. Usually dated to 1054, the Schism was the result of an extended period of tension and sometimes estrangement between then Latin and Greek Churches.

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