The only church in the Middle Ages was the Catholic Church. I am not sure what the question is asking about the church.
The Catholic church was the "state" and ruled the society of the middle ages.
In the Middle Ages, every village, town, and city had a church. In fact, the presence of a church was what distinguished a village from a hamlet.
The church in the middle ages experienced turmoil because it was no longer unified. Disagreements and splintering of the church caused the church to shatter.
Many folks are confused about this issue. Baptist did not have a founder. Not a human founder that is. The head and founder of the church is Jesus Christ Their standards and beliefs come directly from the word of God. They are followers of the Bible and are NOT protastant,seperatists,or a branch from the Catholic church. However these people were not always called Baptists. In ancient times it was just New Testament Christians. The term "Baptist" came around just before the middle ages. Due to persecution the Baptists were in hiding in different parts of the world and did not have an official name, so they were just "Biblical Christians". the first Baptist church in America was The First Baptist Church Of New York. The pastor was a man named John Clark who was a preacher from England.
The Magna Carta contributed the the growing of the church in the Middle Ages.
The Catholic Church was the only church in the Middle Ages and the pope ruled the church and monarchies of Europe.
The church
Church, noble, peasant, serf.
The Roman Catholic Church was the important Church in England during the Middle Ages. In the geographical area of present England, there was a Church referred to as the Celtic Church before the mission of St. Augustine of Canterbury. This Church was in conflict with the Roman Catholic Church about two very important issues. One was the date of Easter, and the other was the tonsure (haircut) of the monks. The Council of Whitby met to decide these vital issues, and ruled in favor of the practices of the Roman Catholic Church, which decided the whole things as far as Northumbria was concerned. The Celtic Church leaders gradually took on the practices of the Roman Catholics after that.
the orthrodox church
Christian Church