Who what when where why treaty of versailles
Solved
Show answers
More tips
- S Style and Beauty How to Braid Hair with a Plaiting Machine: Tips and Recommendations...
- B Business and Finance How to Create a Business Plan? Your Ultimate Guide...
- F Food and Cooking Deflope: What is it and how does it work?...
- F Food and Cooking Why Doesn t the Confirmation Link Come to Email?...
- F Food and Cooking How to Get Reconfirmation of Registration?...
- S Science and Technology Discovering the Anatomy of an LCD TV Screen...
- H Health and Medicine What You Need to Know About Nasal Congestion in Infants: Causes, Symptoms, and Treatment...
- A Auto and Moto What is the Average Lifespan of an Engine in a Car?...
- C Computers and Internet Make Money Online: Secrets and Essential Ways...
- A Auto and Moto How Can Parking Sensors Help Drivers?...
Answers on questions: History
- H History 3. Why did the English explore and colonize North America?...
- H History Which of the following would be a good tile for the map above? A. Territorial Acquisitions of the United States. B. United States Aquisitions from Great Britain. C. Territorial...
- H History Who overthrew the Assyrians?...
- H History He has refused his Assent to Laws, the most wholesome and necessary for the public good. Which of the following statements best explains this quote from the Declaration of Independence?...
- H History In feudal japan, who was the shotgun...
- H History 7. what did martin luther king, jr. do? a. fought for civil rights b. became the first black u.s. senator c. established the harvard law school d. ran for president of the united...
- H History Why did stalin become the leader of the ussr?...
- H History which characterizes the form of government the constitution created for the united states?...
- H History When did architects build castles?...
- H History Which government action violates the right to due process?...
Ответ:
Ответ:
B) It was spread by European missionaries.
Explanation:
Officially, the entry of Christianity occurred in the 4th century AD, when St. Frumentius brought the message of the Gospel from Rome to the kingdom of Aksum, which covered what is now the northeast territory of Ethiopia and Eritrea. The emperor of that time, Ezana, accepted the messenger's words and "the word of God" spread throughout his kingdom with remarkable receptivity. St. Frumentius was named as the first "Abuna" of Ethiopia, head of the Ethiopian Orthodox Church.
What is curious is that in the sixth century, the churches in Egypt and Ethiopia, which followed the patriarch of Alexandria (a city in northern Egypt founded in 331 BC by the Roman Emperor Alexander the Great), separated from Rome and founded their own Coptic or Orthodox church, with its own liturgy, symbols and legends.