Year 10 R.E Church History Timeline

  • 451

    Council of Chalcedon

    The Council of Chalcedon was a congregation gathering held from October 8 to November 1, AD 451, at Chalcedon. The Council is considered to have been the fourth ecumenical committee by the Great Church. Not all Christians concurred with its teachings. Its most essential accomplishment was to issue the Chalcedonian Definition. The Council's judgements and definitions with respect to the celestial denoted a noteworthy defining moment in the Christological civil arguments.
  • Dec 24, 1053

    East-West Schism

    The East–West Schism, regularly alluded to as the Great Schism of 1054, is the break of fellowship between what are currently the Eastern Orthodox and Catholic Churches, which started in the eleventh century and proceeds to the present day.
  • Period: Dec 24, 1346 to Dec 25, 1353

    The Black Death

    The Black Death was a standout amongst the most obliterating pandemics in mankind's history, bringing about the passings of an expected 75 to 200 million individuals and topping in Europe in the years 1346–53
  • Dec 24, 1517

    Ninety-Five These

    The Ninety-five Theses or Disputation on the force of indulgences are a rundown of recommendations for a scholarly controversy composed by Martin Luther in 1517. They propel Luther's positions against what he saw as oppressive practices by ministers offering whole indulgences. These were declarations which would diminish the worldly discipline for sins submitted by the buyer or their friends and family in limbo.
  • Period: Dec 24, 1545 to Dec 25, 1563

    Council of Trent

    The Council of Trent, held somewhere around 1545 and 1563 in Trento and Bologna, northern Italy, was one of the Roman Catholic Church's most vital ecumenical chambers.
  • Sep 25, 1555

    Peace of Augsburg

    The Peace of Augsburg, additionally called the Augsburg Settlement, was a bargain between Charles V and the powers of the Schmalkaldic League, a collusion of Lutheran sovereigns, on September 25, 1555, at the royal city of Augsburg, in present-day Bavaria, Germany. It authoritatively finished the religious battle between the two gatherings and made the lawful division of Christendom perpetual inside the Holy Roman Empire.
  • First Vatican Council

    The Vatican Council was convened by Pope Pius IX on 29 June 1868, after a time of arranging and readiness that started on 6 December 1864.This, the twentieth ecumenical chamber of the Catholic Church, held three centuries after the Council of Trent, opened on 8 December 1869 and dismissed on 20 October 1870.
  • Period: to

    Second Vatican Council

    The Second Vatican Council tended to relations between the Roman Catholic Church and the present day world. It was the twenty-first ecumenical committee of the Catholic Church and the second to be held at Saint Peter's Basilica in the Vatican.