It would be cool to see other religions on the same map
suminlikedatt on
The real pandemic
Smitologyistaking on
I feel like Goa is missing as a region with significant Christian population
ZookeepergameFew1601 on
The expansion from the 16th century onwards is linked to the golden age of European power. Now that Europe is gradually shifting towards atheism and Islam, I wonder how European civilization will change.
Lolman4O on
Thanks Spain for civilization and Christ
MedSPAZ on
I don’t know the sources used here, but nothing of the large Nestorian presence throughout East Asian and India? Never a majority but always there, even Marco Polo wrote about the Nestorians at the great Khan’s court, no?
After-Trifle-1437 on
The destruction of indigenous faiths is really tragic. Fortunately there’s still some pagan communities in Africa.
SomewhereHot4527 on
I would very much add Korea to this map. Christians are not the majority (irreligion is) but it is the main religion.
DramaticSalamander15 on
Christianise all the kingdoms
RedmondBarry1999 on
Is this showing when places became majority Christian, or merely when they had a Christian presence? The darkest shade of blue would indicate the latter, but in that case most of the grey areas should be some shade of green.
Cultural-Ad-8796 on
Why did Christianity spread to the Indian state of Kerala so early?
thatblueblowfish on
Just like a cancer tumour that is spreading in the whole body over time
Previous_Patient_721 on
Christianity is so strong in the Australian outback… Those Emu’s are so faithful.
Marscaleb on
Dafuh? It’s all colored to fit nation boundaries that didn’t exist in the years the map is trying to recognize!
charethcutestory9 on
LOL the New Zealand relocation
beware_of_scorpio on
What’s with the early Christians in modern day Mongolia?
Alert-Algae-6674 on
In China there is actually a very large number of underground churches (non CCP affiliated) that could add tens or hundreds of millions to the total number of Christians around the world
N0t_Baiting on
But Islam is violent according to them
Leave A Reply
Du musst angemeldet sein, um einen Kommentar abzugeben.
19 Kommentare
World’s most successful marketing ever.
It would be cool to see other religions on the same map
The real pandemic
I feel like Goa is missing as a region with significant Christian population
The expansion from the 16th century onwards is linked to the golden age of European power. Now that Europe is gradually shifting towards atheism and Islam, I wonder how European civilization will change.
Thanks Spain for civilization and Christ
I don’t know the sources used here, but nothing of the large Nestorian presence throughout East Asian and India? Never a majority but always there, even Marco Polo wrote about the Nestorians at the great Khan’s court, no?
The destruction of indigenous faiths is really tragic. Fortunately there’s still some pagan communities in Africa.
I would very much add Korea to this map. Christians are not the majority (irreligion is) but it is the main religion.
Christianise all the kingdoms
Is this showing when places became majority Christian, or merely when they had a Christian presence? The darkest shade of blue would indicate the latter, but in that case most of the grey areas should be some shade of green.
Why did Christianity spread to the Indian state of Kerala so early?
Just like a cancer tumour that is spreading in the whole body over time
Christianity is so strong in the Australian outback… Those Emu’s are so faithful.
Dafuh? It’s all colored to fit nation boundaries that didn’t exist in the years the map is trying to recognize!
LOL the New Zealand relocation
What’s with the early Christians in modern day Mongolia?
In China there is actually a very large number of underground churches (non CCP affiliated) that could add tens or hundreds of millions to the total number of Christians around the world
But Islam is violent according to them