Christianity was once so localized to Europe that the term
“Christendom” largely meant Europe. After the fall of Constantinople in
1453, the last outpost of Christian rule in the East was lost. The
history of Medieval Europe was flecked with Christians holding back
Islam. The Battle of Tours in
France prevented the overrunning of Western Europe by Muslims. The
Reconquista in 1492 ended the remnants of Muslim rule in Iberia. The Battle of Lepanto ended the threat of Muslim naval power in the Mediterranean.
Having captured the Roman world from within (following the Edict of Milan
signed by the emperors Constantine I and Licinius in 313 that
proclaimed religious freedom in the Roman Empire), largely because of
its enormous sympathy for women, children, and slaves, Christendom
gradually spread out of Europe into the other parts of the globe.
Indeed, an overt purpose of much early exploration was to bring the
Gospel to the peoples outside Europe or the Middle East (where it was
familiar).
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