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History of Eastern Orthodoxy

618 bytes added, 21:53, 25 July 2023
Added Ottoman Period
In the 9th century, Bulgaria became an Eastern Orthodox nation and neighboring nations began to follow Bulgaria's conversion.[2]
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====Schism with the Roman Catholic Faith (11th Century)====
History tends to place 1054 as the date of the schism between the [[Roman Catholic Church]] and the Eastern Orthodox Church.
====The Ottoman Empire's Rule over Constantinople (15th century)====
 
With the Ottoman Empire's invasion of the Byzantium Empire, the Hagia Sofia was converted into a mosque in 1453.
With the exception of one Divine Liturgy in 1919 during the British, French, Italian, and Greek occupation of Istanbul after the fall of the Ottoman Empire, the building has been a mosque or a museum to this day (2023).[3]
 
=====The Ottoman Period====
Under the rule of the Islamic Ottoman Empire, Christians were considered essentially respected, but limited in traditional activities.
In this setting, Christian leadership in Constantinople was allowed to carry on administration functions for Eastern Orthodox churches within the Ottoman Empire. The faith was allowed to continue. To make an analogy, it would if an Islamic empire took over Italy, but the pope and the Roman Catholic Church was still allowed to carry on general administration functions for churches within the empire.[4]
====References====
[3]https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hagia_Sophia
 
[4]https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Byzantine_music#
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