1054 Answers
What settled a conflict over the control of church offices? (Points : 1) the Schism of 1054 can?
Q.
Asked by - Sun Nov 6 19:15:38 2011 - Trivia - 1 Answers - Comments
A. Thumbnail version: The first question appears to refer to the Investiture Controversy during the 11th-12th centuries in Europe. It surrounded who was responsible for appointing bishops, abbots, (offices) etc. and many other issues. Was it the Papacy or the monarchy? It stemmed from an unorganized Roman Catholic Church trying to implement its canons with the assistance of the Monarchy, but turned into a power struggle primarily with the German and British Monarchs. Monarchs even began replacing Popes and it became messy for a period of time as the Papacy tried to assert religious power of the Church over the secular power of the Monarchies in church matters. Settlement came through the Concordant of London in 1107 and overall final… [cont.]
Answered by - Wed Nov 9 19:29:21 2011
Q.
Asked by - Sun Nov 6 19:15:38 2011 - Trivia - 1 Answers - Comments
A. Thumbnail version: The first question appears to refer to the Investiture Controversy during the 11th-12th centuries in Europe. It surrounded who was responsible for appointing bishops, abbots, (offices) etc. and many other issues. Was it the Papacy or the monarchy? It stemmed from an unorganized Roman Catholic Church trying to implement its canons with the assistance of the Monarchy, but turned into a power struggle primarily with the German and British Monarchs. Monarchs even began replacing Popes and it became messy for a period of time as the Papacy tried to assert religious power of the Church over the secular power of the Monarchies in church matters. Settlement came through the Concordant of London in 1107 and overall final… [cont.]
Answered by - Wed Nov 9 19:29:21 2011
Cultural and/or political effects of the Great Schism of 1054?
Q. Specifically upon the city of Constantinople? Doesn't have to be immediate; I'm looking mainly for stuff between the eleventh and thirteenth centuries.
Asked by tolkienelf - Thu Mar 24 03:02:32 2011 - History - 1 Answers - Comments
A. The Great Schism was caused by cultural and political movements of the day when it occurred. It was much less of a cause than an effect. Those political and cultural movements merely carried on as before. I would look more to what Western Civilization lost as a result of the Great Schism. You see the East moving forward, while the 'lights got turned out' in the West and civilization went into the Dark Ages.
Answered by spiffer1 - Thu Mar 24 08:53:50 2011
Q. Specifically upon the city of Constantinople? Doesn't have to be immediate; I'm looking mainly for stuff between the eleventh and thirteenth centuries.
Asked by tolkienelf - Thu Mar 24 03:02:32 2011 - History - 1 Answers - Comments
A. The Great Schism was caused by cultural and political movements of the day when it occurred. It was much less of a cause than an effect. Those political and cultural movements merely carried on as before. I would look more to what Western Civilization lost as a result of the Great Schism. You see the East moving forward, while the 'lights got turned out' in the West and civilization went into the Dark Ages.
Answered by spiffer1 - Thu Mar 24 08:53:50 2011
Did supernova SN 1006 and SN 1054 have any effect on earth at that time?
Q. Did supernova SN 1006 and SN 1054 have any effect on earth at that time and present time? Did they give any negative effects on earth(or the lifes on earth)?
Asked by - - Thu Nov 5 07:07:14 2009 - Astronomy & Space - 1 Answers - Comments
A. Aside from being noticeable stars at daytime, these two supernova events didn't have any significant (if there is indeed any) effect on Earth. This can be attributed to them being at distances very far from the threshold at which they may endanger Earth. SN1006 is suspected of being Type Ia and 7,200 light-years sistant in constellation Lupus while SN 1054 in Taurus is 6,300 light-years away, a Type II supernova. SN 1006 peaked at -7.5 magnitude while SN 1054 reached -6. Both objects are a lot brighter than Venus is in the sky. Another object which may have rivalled SN 1006 or may be even brighter. There is no data in recorded history. Only in core samples taken from Antarctica that the evidence can be found. The object may have exploded… [cont.]
Answered by ReginaldQ - Thu Nov 5 07:35:45 2009
Q. Did supernova SN 1006 and SN 1054 have any effect on earth at that time and present time? Did they give any negative effects on earth(or the lifes on earth)?
Asked by - - Thu Nov 5 07:07:14 2009 - Astronomy & Space - 1 Answers - Comments
A. Aside from being noticeable stars at daytime, these two supernova events didn't have any significant (if there is indeed any) effect on Earth. This can be attributed to them being at distances very far from the threshold at which they may endanger Earth. SN1006 is suspected of being Type Ia and 7,200 light-years sistant in constellation Lupus while SN 1054 in Taurus is 6,300 light-years away, a Type II supernova. SN 1006 peaked at -7.5 magnitude while SN 1054 reached -6. Both objects are a lot brighter than Venus is in the sky. Another object which may have rivalled SN 1006 or may be even brighter. There is no data in recorded history. Only in core samples taken from Antarctica that the evidence can be found. The object may have exploded… [cont.]
Answered by ReginaldQ - Thu Nov 5 07:35:45 2009
n 1054 the Christian church split into two churches forever, the Roman Catholic Church and the East?
Q.
Asked by Brent P - Mon Feb 23 16:13:28 2009 - Religion & Spirituality - 6 Answers - Comments
A. Eastern Orthodox Church
Answered by Punk Rock and Minerals - Mon Feb 23 16:16:46 2009
Q.
Asked by Brent P - Mon Feb 23 16:13:28 2009 - Religion & Spirituality - 6 Answers - Comments
A. Eastern Orthodox Church
Answered by Punk Rock and Minerals - Mon Feb 23 16:16:46 2009
Who was the emperor of Byzantium at the time of the great schism of 1054?
Q. a. Alexius I b. Justinian c. Basil II d. Constantine IX
Asked by bobdole_13 - Thu Dec 13 22:18:38 2007 - History - 2 Answers - Comments
A. constantine read him in the history book! that guy is correct
Answered by woohoo! - Thu Dec 13 23:04:29 2007
Q. a. Alexius I b. Justinian c. Basil II d. Constantine IX
Asked by bobdole_13 - Thu Dec 13 22:18:38 2007 - History - 2 Answers - Comments
A. constantine read him in the history book! that guy is correct
Answered by woohoo! - Thu Dec 13 23:04:29 2007
what is meant by the division of Christianity between East and West in 1054 CE?
Q. does anyone know what that means? what`s meant by east and west? are they countries? how did this divide? i`m s Ooo lost.. =[
Asked by [bOo] - Tue Aug 15 07:07:06 2006 - History - 7 Answers - Comments
A. The Western (Roman Catholic) Church and the Eastern (various Orthodox) Churches had been moving apart since the collapse of the Western Roman Empire. The big difference was that in the East (which became the Byzantine Empire), there were (and still are) four Patriarchs, in the cities of Alexandria, Jerusalem, Antioch, and Constantinople, which in the West, there was just one, the Bishop of Rome (the Pope), with the approximate border being in the western Balkans. The four Eastern Patriarchs were in turf wars with each other until Muslims conquered all but Constantinople. The basic difference was that in the East, Greek was the dominant language of the Church, which is more suited to Christological debating than Latin, the language of the… [cont.]
Answered by Dziemi~Mad ScyiieNGtidzT - Sat Aug 19 04:11:45 2006
Q. does anyone know what that means? what`s meant by east and west? are they countries? how did this divide? i`m s Ooo lost.. =[
Asked by [bOo] - Tue Aug 15 07:07:06 2006 - History - 7 Answers - Comments
A. The Western (Roman Catholic) Church and the Eastern (various Orthodox) Churches had been moving apart since the collapse of the Western Roman Empire. The big difference was that in the East (which became the Byzantine Empire), there were (and still are) four Patriarchs, in the cities of Alexandria, Jerusalem, Antioch, and Constantinople, which in the West, there was just one, the Bishop of Rome (the Pope), with the approximate border being in the western Balkans. The four Eastern Patriarchs were in turf wars with each other until Muslims conquered all but Constantinople. The basic difference was that in the East, Greek was the dominant language of the Church, which is more suited to Christological debating than Latin, the language of the… [cont.]
Answered by Dziemi~Mad ScyiieNGtidzT - Sat Aug 19 04:11:45 2006
Can anyone please tell me what is the capacitance value of SMD 270 1054 d?
Q.
Asked by Saad S - Tue Jan 6 09:40:47 2009 - Engineering - 1 Answers - Comments
A. If it is very small, probably 270p F. If it is larger, it could be 270n F .
Answered by billrussell42 - Tue Jan 6 14:35:33 2009
Q.
Asked by Saad S - Tue Jan 6 09:40:47 2009 - Engineering - 1 Answers - Comments
A. If it is very small, probably 270p F. If it is larger, it could be 270n F .
Answered by billrussell42 - Tue Jan 6 14:35:33 2009
i am planing to buy a laptop HP Pavilion DV6 1054 can anyone review on the model?
Q. it has 2.1 core 2 duo processor 4gb ram and 500gb hard disk and 512 Mb dedicated ati video memory... has anyone used it?? i want some user reviews on the model or some one has a better laptop model of HP upto range of $880... help me out plzzz... i can't find user reviews on the net...
Asked by Yaseen - Sun Jan 24 14:18:34 2010 - Laptops & Notebooks - 1 Answers - Comments
Q. it has 2.1 core 2 duo processor 4gb ram and 500gb hard disk and 512 Mb dedicated ati video memory... has anyone used it?? i want some user reviews on the model or some one has a better laptop model of HP upto range of $880... help me out plzzz... i can't find user reviews on the net...
Asked by Yaseen - Sun Jan 24 14:18:34 2010 - Laptops & Notebooks - 1 Answers - Comments
I get error msg 135,77,1054,1432 when I log in, How do I fix it?
Q. I can,t forward or reply to msgs ether.
Asked by bobdowling@prodigy.net - Mon May 29 12:59:58 2006 - Computer Networking - 1 Answers - Comments
A. run antivirus software or you may have to reinstall windows
Answered by clark10clark - Mon May 29 13:02:21 2006
Q. I can,t forward or reply to msgs ether.
Asked by bobdowling@prodigy.net - Mon May 29 12:59:58 2006 - Computer Networking - 1 Answers - Comments
A. run antivirus software or you may have to reinstall windows
Answered by clark10clark - Mon May 29 13:02:21 2006
In 1054, the Roman Christian Church was divided into two major parts. The eastern part was called the?
Q. A. Patriarchy of Constantinople. B. Greek Orthodox Church. C. Russian Orthodox Church. D. Roman Catholic Church.
Asked by kidd81 - Thu Dec 4 13:42:56 2008 - History - 5 Answers - Comments
A. The Orthodox and Catholic Churches were one and the same until they separated from one another in 1054 mainly over the role of the Pope. There are very few theological differences. The main difference is that the Orthodox Churches ( use the Byzantine Rite ( and the Catholic Church use the Roman or Latin Rite. Pope John Paul II said of the Orthodox Churches in Orientale Lumen, "A particularly close link already binds us. We have almost everything in common." For the entire document, see: With love in Christ.
Answered by imacatholic2 - Thu Dec 4 15:06:15 2008
Q. A. Patriarchy of Constantinople. B. Greek Orthodox Church. C. Russian Orthodox Church. D. Roman Catholic Church.
Asked by kidd81 - Thu Dec 4 13:42:56 2008 - History - 5 Answers - Comments
A. The Orthodox and Catholic Churches were one and the same until they separated from one another in 1054 mainly over the role of the Pope. There are very few theological differences. The main difference is that the Orthodox Churches ( use the Byzantine Rite ( and the Catholic Church use the Roman or Latin Rite. Pope John Paul II said of the Orthodox Churches in Orientale Lumen, "A particularly close link already binds us. We have almost everything in common." For the entire document, see: With love in Christ.
Answered by imacatholic2 - Thu Dec 4 15:06:15 2008
In 1054, what happened between the Eastern (Greek-speaking) Church and the Western (Latin-speaking) Church?
Q. a. They published an edition of the Bible on which all Christians could agree. b. They agreed on the official date of Easter. c. They split apart. d. They moved the capital of the Empire to Constantinople.
Asked by cuppycake - Sat Dec 4 17:11:31 2010 - History - 2 Answers - Comments
A. C. This is known as the Great Schism (or the East-West Schism) For more information check out the Wikipedia article.
Answered by - Sat Dec 4 17:51:07 2010
Q. a. They published an edition of the Bible on which all Christians could agree. b. They agreed on the official date of Easter. c. They split apart. d. They moved the capital of the Empire to Constantinople.
Asked by cuppycake - Sat Dec 4 17:11:31 2010 - History - 2 Answers - Comments
A. C. This is known as the Great Schism (or the East-West Schism) For more information check out the Wikipedia article.
Answered by - Sat Dec 4 17:51:07 2010
I need help in finding the factors of 1054?
Q. help
Asked by unnecessary reply - Wed Nov 3 18:58:46 2010 - Religion & Spirituality - 3 Answers - Comments
Q. help
Asked by unnecessary reply - Wed Nov 3 18:58:46 2010 - Religion & Spirituality - 3 Answers - Comments
What was the name of the Church before the Great Schism of 1054?
Q. How was called the Church before the Schism of 1054? Catholic? Ortodox? Christian?
Asked by - Sun Jul 25 16:13:34 2010 - Religion & Spirituality - 6 Answers - Comments
A. Steve.
Answered by ungodly - Sun Jul 25 16:14:50 2010
Q. How was called the Church before the Schism of 1054? Catholic? Ortodox? Christian?
Asked by - Sun Jul 25 16:13:34 2010 - Religion & Spirituality - 6 Answers - Comments
A. Steve.
Answered by ungodly - Sun Jul 25 16:14:50 2010
How could the supernova have been seen in 1054?
Q. How could the supernova, also known as the Crab Nebula, have been seen in 1054 if telescopes weren't invented until the 1600s?
Asked by Deborahalis - Sat May 17 20:05:12 2008 - Astronomy & Space - 8 Answers - Comments
A. Tracing the expansion back revealed that the nebula must have become visible on Earth about 900 years ago. Historical records revealed that a new star bright enough to be seen in the daytime had been recorded in the same part of the sky by Chinese and Arab astronomers in 1054.Given its great distance, the daytime "guest star" observed by the Chinese and Arabs could only have been a supernova a massive, exploding star, having exhausted its supply of energy from nuclear fusion and collapsed in on itself. So basically it was bright enough back then.
Answered by Nico - Sat May 17 20:16:29 2008
Q. How could the supernova, also known as the Crab Nebula, have been seen in 1054 if telescopes weren't invented until the 1600s?
Asked by Deborahalis - Sat May 17 20:05:12 2008 - Astronomy & Space - 8 Answers - Comments
A. Tracing the expansion back revealed that the nebula must have become visible on Earth about 900 years ago. Historical records revealed that a new star bright enough to be seen in the daytime had been recorded in the same part of the sky by Chinese and Arab astronomers in 1054.Given its great distance, the daytime "guest star" observed by the Chinese and Arabs could only have been a supernova a massive, exploding star, having exhausted its supply of energy from nuclear fusion and collapsed in on itself. So basically it was bright enough back then.
Answered by Nico - Sat May 17 20:16:29 2008
How does Western Christianity differ from Eastern Orthodox Christianity in the centuries before 1054?
Q.
Asked by Mandy - Sat Jan 17 15:39:48 2009 - Religion & Spirituality - 1 Answers - Comments
A. Oh man, I don't have nearly enough room on here to answer that question. But here is a website with hundreds of articles on the subject: And here is a site that offers a rather radical (and highly technical) view of the subject: You can also check out the Myriobiblos articles on theology at , but many of the good articles are in Greek. I thought this statement was interesting: "Conservative christians reject evolution, whereas the second most numerous group and the only one preserving the Apostle Paul's original ontic-energetic paradigm does accept the evolution of creation, revelation (tradition), and salvation (with three phases)."
Answered by Moondoggy - Sat Jan 17 15:47:18 2009
Q.
Asked by Mandy - Sat Jan 17 15:39:48 2009 - Religion & Spirituality - 1 Answers - Comments
A. Oh man, I don't have nearly enough room on here to answer that question. But here is a website with hundreds of articles on the subject: And here is a site that offers a rather radical (and highly technical) view of the subject: You can also check out the Myriobiblos articles on theology at , but many of the good articles are in Greek. I thought this statement was interesting: "Conservative christians reject evolution, whereas the second most numerous group and the only one preserving the Apostle Paul's original ontic-energetic paradigm does accept the evolution of creation, revelation (tradition), and salvation (with three phases)."
Answered by Moondoggy - Sat Jan 17 15:47:18 2009
How many pounds does 1054 calories equal?
Q. I have this app too help me lose weight and over the past three days I have burned a total of 1054 calories and it also tracks weight loss and it told me I lost two pounds but I'm not so sure if its correct I've been bike riding BTW
Asked by - Tue Mar 6 17:37:25 2012 - Diet & Fitness - 1 Answers - Comments
A. Lmao... it's not correct, To lose a pound, you need to burn 3,500 calories.
Answered by - Tue Mar 6 17:38:06 2012
Q. I have this app too help me lose weight and over the past three days I have burned a total of 1054 calories and it also tracks weight loss and it told me I lost two pounds but I'm not so sure if its correct I've been bike riding BTW
Asked by - Tue Mar 6 17:37:25 2012 - Diet & Fitness - 1 Answers - Comments
A. Lmao... it's not correct, To lose a pound, you need to burn 3,500 calories.
Answered by - Tue Mar 6 17:38:06 2012
Eastern Orthodox Christians: Didn't the Pope have full authority before the 1054 Schism?
Q.
Asked by Jack (Catholicism is the Truth!) - Sat Jan 2 23:17:24 2010 - Religion & Spirituality - 6 Answers - Comments
A. The 1054 Schism was the result of this very debate. Most in the Church of Rome accepted that the Pope had full authority, while most outside the Church of Rome recognized full authority. In practice, the Pope had full authority because the other Patriarchs did not disagree with him, and they indeed recognized that the Pope had a special role in managing dialogue between Patriarchs (a role given to the Patriarch of Constantinople after 1054, which continues to this day). The Schism was the result of the first major disagreement in which none of the Patriarchs would budge, and led to a confrontation between the Pope and the other Patriarchs about papal authority. The antiquity of the Orthodox understanding of the role of the Pope is… [cont.]
Answered by - Sun Jan 3 22:05:10 2010
Q.
Asked by Jack (Catholicism is the Truth!) - Sat Jan 2 23:17:24 2010 - Religion & Spirituality - 6 Answers - Comments
A. The 1054 Schism was the result of this very debate. Most in the Church of Rome accepted that the Pope had full authority, while most outside the Church of Rome recognized full authority. In practice, the Pope had full authority because the other Patriarchs did not disagree with him, and they indeed recognized that the Pope had a special role in managing dialogue between Patriarchs (a role given to the Patriarch of Constantinople after 1054, which continues to this day). The Schism was the result of the first major disagreement in which none of the Patriarchs would budge, and led to a confrontation between the Pope and the other Patriarchs about papal authority. The antiquity of the Orthodox understanding of the role of the Pope is… [cont.]
Answered by - Sun Jan 3 22:05:10 2010
What is the best medicine/solution for person w/ high immunoglobuline of 1054 for my allergy?
Q.
Asked by rose - Fri Jul 18 07:22:49 2008 - Allergies - 2 Answers - Comments
A. It would be best to determine what you are allergic too, so that it can be avoided in the future. Benadryl is the best.
Answered by Christy SD Nurse - Fri Jul 18 10:51:24 2008
Q.
Asked by rose - Fri Jul 18 07:22:49 2008 - Allergies - 2 Answers - Comments
A. It would be best to determine what you are allergic too, so that it can be avoided in the future. Benadryl is the best.
Answered by Christy SD Nurse - Fri Jul 18 10:51:24 2008
Which of the following emerged as the center of Orthodox Christianity after the Great Schism of 1054?
Q. Constantinople Vatican City Leningrad Vladimir
Asked by - Fri Apr 16 11:59:00 2010 - Religion & Spirituality - 3 Answers - Comments
A. Constantinople. Leningrad didn't exist back then!
Answered by Sapremic - Fri Apr 16 12:03:28 2010
Q. Constantinople Vatican City Leningrad Vladimir
Asked by - Fri Apr 16 11:59:00 2010 - Religion & Spirituality - 3 Answers - Comments
A. Constantinople. Leningrad didn't exist back then!
Answered by Sapremic - Fri Apr 16 12:03:28 2010
Why did the Great Schism(1054)occur and who were the important people who caused the Great Schism?
Q. How, why did the Great Schism(1054) occur and who were the important people who caused the Great Schism to happen? please answer properly and correctly, but not too long. Thank you
Asked by KOREAN UNPM - Sun Apr 20 20:06:50 2008 - Religion & Spirituality - 1 Answers - Comments
A. Pope Leo IX (the same who ordered celibacy down to sub-deacons in his 1049 Easter Synod) and Michael Cerularius, Patriarch of Constantinople. Leo demanded he and Rome be recognized as having primacy, Cerularius refused asserting, correctly, that the 28th Canon of the Council of Chalcedon explicitly proclaimed the equality of the Bishops of Rome and Constantinople. So we can thank Leo for splitting the church for a thousand years, and for a thousand years of priestly pedophilia. So of course he was made a saint.
Answered by Hazbro - Sun Apr 20 20:20:09 2008
Q. How, why did the Great Schism(1054) occur and who were the important people who caused the Great Schism to happen? please answer properly and correctly, but not too long. Thank you
Asked by KOREAN UNPM - Sun Apr 20 20:06:50 2008 - Religion & Spirituality - 1 Answers - Comments
A. Pope Leo IX (the same who ordered celibacy down to sub-deacons in his 1049 Easter Synod) and Michael Cerularius, Patriarch of Constantinople. Leo demanded he and Rome be recognized as having primacy, Cerularius refused asserting, correctly, that the 28th Canon of the Council of Chalcedon explicitly proclaimed the equality of the Bishops of Rome and Constantinople. So we can thank Leo for splitting the church for a thousand years, and for a thousand years of priestly pedophilia. So of course he was made a saint.
Answered by Hazbro - Sun Apr 20 20:20:09 2008
From Yahoo Answer Search: '1054'
Sat Mar 10 00:00:03 2012