The East-West Schism reference article from the English Wikipedia on 24-Apr-2004
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East-West Schism

The East-West Schism, usually called the Great Schism, was the event that separated Eastern Orthodoxy and Western Catholicism in 1054. The two churches split along doctrinal, theological, linguistic, political, and geographic lines; they remain unreconciled to this day.

With movement of the emperor and political authority from Rome to Constantinople, a division was caused in the religious climate of the empire. Because of the custom of the emperor having authority in both temporal and religious matters, this eventually caused a split between bishops following the Pope in Rome and those following the emperor in Constantinople.

The catalysts of the first schism included:

This led to the exchange of excommunications by the representative of Pope Leo IX and the Patriarch of Constantinople Michael Cerularius in 1054 (finally rescinded in 1965) and the separation of the Roman Catholic and the Orthodox churches, each of which now claims to be "the One Holy Catholic and Apostolic Church." Though communion was not finally broken until after the Ottoman invasion of Constantinople in 1453 the fundamental breach has never been healed.

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