Christianisation$539978$ - meaning and definition. What is Christianisation$539978$
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What (who) is Christianisation$539978$ - definition

HISTORICAL PROCESS BY WHICH ICELAND WAS CONVERTED TO CHRISTIANITY
Conversion of Iceland; Christianisation of iceland; Christianisation of Iceland

Christianization         
  • Baltic Tribes c 1200
  • Depiction of the [[Battle of Navas de Tolosa]] by 19th-century painter [[Francisco de Paula Van Halen]].
  • Statue depicting the baptism of Clovis by [[Saint Remigius]].
  • Arkona]] in a painting by Laurits Tuxen
  • Rubens]].
  • Czech Rep. - Bohemia, Moravia and Silesia IV (en)
  • Czech Republic in Europe (-rivers -mini map)
  • [[Basil I]] with delegation of Serbs
  • alt=this is a graph showing the normal distribution of a population as how the diffusion of ideas most likely took place
  • alt=this is a map showing how and where congregations formed ins the first three centuries
  • Duchy of Bohemia and the Holy Roman Empire in 11th century
  • Expulsions of Jews in Europe from 1100 to 1600
  • Geographic map of Balkan Peninsula
  • Grand Duchy of Lithuania Rus and Samogitia 1434
  • pp=90–91; 640}}
  • Heiligenkreuz.St. Benedict
  • alt=this is a map showing the area that Justinian I conquered
  • ''The [[Baptism of Kiev]]ans'', a fresco by [[Viktor Vasnetsov]]
  • ''The Baptism of Kievans'', a painting by [[Klavdiy Lebedev]]
  • ''[[Introduction of Christianity in Poland]]'', by [[Jan Matejko]], 1888–89, [[National Museum, Warsaw]]
  • ''"First Mass in Brazil"''. painting by [[Victor Meirelles]].
  • Noah catacomb (orans)
  • Evangelization of Mexico
  • alt=stylized portrait of Jame the Just
  • [[San Pedro de la Nave]], one of the oldest churches in Spain.
  • Serbia]], from the late 9th century – one of the oldest artifacts of the Christianization of the Serbs
  • Southeastern Europe Late Ninth Century
  • Physical Christianization: the choir of San Salvatore, [[Spoleto]], occupies the [[cella]] of a Roman temple.
  • Image of the King Saint [[Stephen I of Hungary]], from the medieval codex Chronicon Pictum from the 14th century.
PROCESS BY WHICH CHRISTIANITY SPREADS IN A SOCIETY OR CULTURE
Christianized; Christianised; Christianisation; Christianise; Christianize; Christianising; Christianizes; Christianises; Christianization of Europe; Christianization of ancient Rome; Christianization of Rome; Christianizing; Christianisation of Europe
·noun The act or process of converting or being converted to a true Christianity.
Christianizing         
  • Baltic Tribes c 1200
  • Depiction of the [[Battle of Navas de Tolosa]] by 19th-century painter [[Francisco de Paula Van Halen]].
  • Statue depicting the baptism of Clovis by [[Saint Remigius]].
  • Arkona]] in a painting by Laurits Tuxen
  • Rubens]].
  • Czech Rep. - Bohemia, Moravia and Silesia IV (en)
  • Czech Republic in Europe (-rivers -mini map)
  • [[Basil I]] with delegation of Serbs
  • alt=this is a graph showing the normal distribution of a population as how the diffusion of ideas most likely took place
  • alt=this is a map showing how and where congregations formed ins the first three centuries
  • Duchy of Bohemia and the Holy Roman Empire in 11th century
  • Expulsions of Jews in Europe from 1100 to 1600
  • Geographic map of Balkan Peninsula
  • Grand Duchy of Lithuania Rus and Samogitia 1434
  • pp=90–91; 640}}
  • Heiligenkreuz.St. Benedict
  • alt=this is a map showing the area that Justinian I conquered
  • ''The [[Baptism of Kiev]]ans'', a fresco by [[Viktor Vasnetsov]]
  • ''The Baptism of Kievans'', a painting by [[Klavdiy Lebedev]]
  • ''[[Introduction of Christianity in Poland]]'', by [[Jan Matejko]], 1888–89, [[National Museum, Warsaw]]
  • ''"First Mass in Brazil"''. painting by [[Victor Meirelles]].
  • Noah catacomb (orans)
  • Evangelization of Mexico
  • alt=stylized portrait of Jame the Just
  • [[San Pedro de la Nave]], one of the oldest churches in Spain.
  • Serbia]], from the late 9th century – one of the oldest artifacts of the Christianization of the Serbs
  • Southeastern Europe Late Ninth Century
  • Physical Christianization: the choir of San Salvatore, [[Spoleto]], occupies the [[cella]] of a Roman temple.
  • Image of the King Saint [[Stephen I of Hungary]], from the medieval codex Chronicon Pictum from the 14th century.
PROCESS BY WHICH CHRISTIANITY SPREADS IN A SOCIETY OR CULTURE
Christianized; Christianised; Christianisation; Christianise; Christianize; Christianising; Christianizes; Christianises; Christianization of Europe; Christianization of ancient Rome; Christianization of Rome; Christianizing; Christianisation of Europe
(·p.pr. ·vb.n.) of Christianize.
Christianization of Goa         
  • Holy Cross]]''), of a Goan Catholic family, constructed in the style of [[Portuguese architecture]]
  • Christian maidens of Goa meeting a Portuguese nobleman seeking a wife, from the [[Códice Casanatense]] (c. 1540)
  • A view of the [[Se Cathedral]]
  • Avelar Rebelo]] (1635)
LARGE-SCALE CONVERSION TO CHRISTIANITY OF GOA IN INDIA AFTER ITS CONQUEST AND OCCUPATION BY THE PORTUGUESE EMPIRE
Christianisation of Goa; Christianisation in Goa
The indigenous population of the erstwhile Portuguese colony of Goa, Daman and Diu underwent Christianisation following the Portuguese conquest of Goa in 1510. The converts in the Velhas Conquistas (Old Conquests) to Roman Catholicism were then granted full Portuguese citizenship.

Wikipedia

Christianization of Iceland

Iceland was Christianized in the year 1000 CE, when Christianity became the religion by law. In Icelandic, this event is known as the kristnitaka (literally, "the taking of Christianity").

The vast majority of the initial settlers of Iceland during the settlement of Iceland in the 9th and 10th centuries CE were pagan, worshipping the Æsir (the Norse gods). Beginning in 980, Iceland was visited by several Christian missionaries who had little success; but when Olaf Tryggvason (who had converted around 998) ascended to the Norwegian throne, there were many more converts, and the two rival religions soon divided the country and threatened civil war.

After war broke out in Denmark and Norway, the matter was submitted to arbitration at the Althing. Law speaker and pagan Thorgeir Thorkelsson proposed "one law and one religion" after which baptism and conversion to Christianity became compulsory. Ari Thorgilsson's Book of the Icelanders, the oldest indigenous account of Iceland's Christianization describes how Icelanders agreed to convert to Christianity through a bargain whereby some pragmatic concessions were granted to the pagans in exchange for converting.