Roman Catholic Church
Rome
1054 and after
The break between Eastern and Western Christianity grew from long-standing tensions in authority, language, liturgy, and political life, then hardened over time.
Rome
Constantinople
Catholic and Orthodox churches remain distinct, but modern dialogue has continued, especially after the lifting of mutual excommunications in 1965.
Political and cultural distance made doctrinal conflict harder to resolve.
As the Roman Empire's eastern and western centers diverged, so did habits of governance, liturgical expression, and theological style. Mutual unfamiliarity increased suspicion, especially when local customs became symbols of wider authority claims.
The mutual excommunications of 1054 were dramatic but not the only cause of division.
The legation of Cardinal Humbert and the conflict with Patriarch Michael Cerularius made separation visible, but communion had already been strained. The later memory of 1054 often simplifies a more layered breakdown of trust and jurisdiction.
Later conflicts, especially the sack of Constantinople, deepened the rupture beyond immediate doctrinal dispute.
The Fourth Crusade and Latin occupation of Constantinople intensified ecclesial and civil resentment. After that, the split was reinforced by memory, wounded trust, and competing institutional worlds, not merely by one unresolved theological formula.