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Religion in Europe

Religion has been a major influence on the societies, cultures, traditions, philosophies, artistic expressions and laws within present-day Europe. The largest religion in Europe is Christianity.[1] However, irreligion and practical secularisation are also prominent in some countries.[2][3] In Southeastern Europe, three countries (Bosnia and Herzegovina, Kosovo and Albania) have Muslim majorities, with Christianity being the second-largest religion in those countries. Ancient European religions included veneration for deities such as Zeus. Modern revival movements of these religions include Heathenism, Rodnovery, Romuva, Druidry, Wicca, and others. Smaller religions include Indian religions, Judaism, and some East Asian religions, which are found in their largest groups in Britain, France, and Kalmykia.

Importance of Religion in Europe (results of a 2008/2009 Gallup poll)
Predominance of Christianity in countries across Europe (2010)

Little is known about the prehistoric religion of Neolithic Europe. Bronze and Iron Age religion in Europe as elsewhere was predominantly polytheistic (Ancient Greek religion, Ancient Roman religion, Basque mythology, Finnish paganism, Celtic polytheism, Germanic paganism, etc.).

The Roman Empire officially adopted Christianity in AD 380. During the Early Middle Ages, most of Europe underwent Christianization, a process essentially complete with the Christianization of Scandinavia in the High Middle Ages. The notion of "Europe" and the "Western World" has been intimately connected with the concept of "Christendom", and many even consider Christianity as the unifying belief that created a European identity,[4] especially since Christianity in the Middle East was marginalized by the rise of Islam from the 8th century. This confrontation led to the Crusades, which ultimately failed militarily, but were an important step in the emergence of a European identity based on religion. Despite this, traditions of folk religion continued at all times, largely independent from institutional religion or dogmatic theology.

The Great Schism of the 11th century and Reformation of the 16th century tore apart Christendom into hostile factions, and following the Age of Enlightenment of the 18th century, atheism and agnosticism have spread across Europe. Nineteenth-century Orientalism contributed to a certain popularity of Hinduism and Buddhism, and the 20th century brought increasing syncretism, New Age, and various new religious movements divorcing spirituality from inherited traditions for many Europeans. Recent times have seen increased secularisation and religious pluralism.[5]

Religiosity edit

 
Data: https://www.kaggle.com/umichigan/world-religions

Some European countries have experienced a decline in church membership and church attendance.[6][7] A relevant example of this trend is Sweden where the Church of Sweden, previously the state-church until 2000, claimed to have 82.9% of the Swedish population as its flock in 2000. Surveys showed this had dropped to 72.9% by 2008[8] and to 56.4% by 2019.[9] Moreover, in the 2005 Eurobarometer survey 23%[10] of the Swedish population said that they do not believe there is any sort of spirit, God or life force and in the 2010 Eurobarometer survey 34%[2] said the same.

Gallup survey 2008–2009 edit

During 2008–2009, a Gallup survey asked in several countries the question "Is religion important in your daily life?" The table and map below shows percentage of people who answered "Yes" to the question.[11][12]

 
Results of a 2008/2009 Gallup survey on whether respondents said that religion was "important in [their] daily life."[11][12]
  
0%–9%
  
10%–19% (Estonia, Sweden, Denmark)
  
20%–29% (Norway, Czech Republic, United Kingdom, Finland)
  
30%–39% (France, Netherlands, Belgium, Bulgaria, Russia, Belarus, Luxembourg, Hungary, Albania, Latvia)
  
40%–49% (Germany, Switzerland, Lithuania, Kazakhstan, Ukraine, Slovenia, Slovakia, Spain)
  
50%–59% (Azerbaijan, Serbia, Ireland, Austria)
  
60%–69%
  
70%–79% (Croatia, Montenegro, Greece, Portugal, Italy, Poland, Cyprus, North Macedonia)
  
80%–89% (Turkey, Romania, Malta, Armenia, Moldova, Bosnia and Herzegovina)
  
90%–100% (Kosovo, Georgia)
  
No data
Importance of Religion in Europe by Gallup Poll (2008–2009)[11][12]
Country Percentage
  Estonia
16%
  Sweden
17%
  Denmark
19%
  Norway
21%
  Czech Republic
21%
  United Kingdom
27%
  Finland
28%
  France
30%
  Netherlands
33%
  Belgium
33%
  Bulgaria
34%
  Russia
34%
  Belarus
34%
  Luxembourg
39%
  Hungary
39%
  Albania
39%
  Latvia
39%
  Germany
40%
   Switzerland
41%
  Lithuania
42%
  Kazakhstan
43%
  Ukraine
46%
  Slovenia
47%
  Slovakia
47%
  Spain
49%
  Azerbaijan
50%
  Serbia
54%
  Ireland
54%
  Austria
55%
  Croatia
70%
  Montenegro
71%
  Greece
71%
  Portugal
72%
  Italy
72%
  Poland
75%
  Cyprus
75%
  Romania
76%
  Bosnia and Herzegovina
80%
  Turkey
82%
  Malta
86%
  Moldova
88%
  Armenia
89%
  Kosovo
90%
  Georgia
90%

During 2007–2008, a Gallup poll asked in several countries the question "Does religion occupy an important place in your life?" The table on right shows percentage of people who answered "No".[13]

Lack of Importance of Religion in Europe by Gallup poll (2007–2008)
Country Percentage
  Estonia
84%
  Sweden
83%
  Denmark
80%
  Norway
78%
  Azerbaijan
74%
  Czech Republic
74%
  France
73%
  United Kingdom
71%
  Finland
69%
  Netherlands
66%
  Belarus
65%
  Russia
63%
  Albania
63%
  Bulgaria
62%
  Latvia
62%
  Belgium
61%
  Hungary
59%
  Slovenia
59%
  Spain
59%
  Germany
57%
  Switzerland
56%
  Ukraine
54%
  Lithuania
52%
  Slovakia
51%
  Austria
42%
  Ireland
42%
  Romania
31%
  Serbia
31%
  Croatia
30%
  Greece
30%
  Portugal
27%
  Montenegro
27%
  Italy
26%
  Cyprus
24%
  Poland
23%
  Bosnia and Herzegovina
19%
  North Macedonia
19%
  Malta
18%
  Moldova
11%
  Armenia
10%
  Turkey
9%
  Georgia
9%

Eurobarometer survey 2010 edit

 
Largest (non-)religious group by EU member state[14] according to Eurobarometer survey 2010.[2]
  More than 75% Catholic
  50–75% Catholic
  Relative Catholic majority
  50–75% Protestant
  More than 75% Orthodox
  50–75% non-religious
  Relative non-religious majority
  More than 75% Muslim

The 2010 Eurobarometer survey[2] found that, on average, 51% of the citizens of the EU member states state that they "believe there is a God", 26% "believe there is some sort of spirit or life force" while 20% "don't believe there is any sort of spirit, God or life force". 3% declined to answer. According to a recent study (Dogan, Mattei, Religious Beliefs in Europe: Factors of Accelerated Decline), 47% of French people declared themselves as agnostics in 2003. This situation is often called "Post-Christian Europe". A decrease in religiousness and church attendance in Denmark, Belgium, France, Germany, Netherlands, and Sweden has been noted, despite a concurrent increase in some countries like Greece (2% in 1 year). The Eurobarometer survey must be taken with caution, however, as there are discrepancies between it and national census results. For example, in the United Kingdom, the 2001 census revealed over 70% of the population regarded themselves as "Christian" with only 15% professing to have "no religion", though the wording of the question has been criticized as "leading" by the British Humanist Association.[15] Romania, one of the most religious countries in Europe, witnessed a threefold increase in the number of atheists between 2002 and 2011, as revealed by the most recent national census.[16]

 
Eurobarometer survey 2005 chart results

The following is a list of European countries ranked by religiosity, based on the rate of belief, according to the Eurobarometer survey 2010.[2] The 2010 Eurobarometer survey asked whether the person "believes there is a God", "believes there is some sort of spirit or life force", or "doesn't believe there is any sort of spirit, God or life force".

Eurobarometer survey 2010[2]
Country "I believe
there is a God"
"I believe there is some
sort of spirit or life force"
"I don't believe there is any sort
of spirit, God or life force"
  Malta 94% 4% 2%
  Romania 93% 6% 1%
  Cyprus 88% 8% 3%
  Poland 79% 14% 5%
  Greece 79% 16% 4%
  Italy 74% 20% 6%
  Ireland 70% 20% 7%
  Portugal 70% 15% 12%
  Slovakia 63% 23% 13%
  Spain 59% 20% 19%
  Lithuania 47% 37% 12%
  Luxembourg 46% 22% 24%
  Hungary 45% 34% 20%
  Austria 44% 38% 12%
  Germany 44% 25% 27%
  Latvia 38% 48% 11%
  United Kingdom 37% 33% 25%
  Belgium 37% 31% 27%
  Bulgaria 36% 43% 15%
  Finland 33% 42% 22%
  Slovenia 32% 36% 26%
  Denmark 28% 47% 24%
  Netherlands 28% 39% 30%
  France 27% 27% 40%
  Estonia 18% 50% 29%
  Sweden 18% 45% 34%
  Czech Republic 16% 44% 37%
  EU27 51% 26% 20%
  Turkey (EUCU, not EU) 94% 1% 1%
  Croatia (joined EU in 2013) 69% 22% 7%
  Switzerland (EFTA, not EU) 44% 39% 11%
  Iceland (EFTA, not EU) 31% 49% 18%
  Norway (EFTA, not EU) 22% 44% 29%

The decrease in theism is illustrated in the 1981 and 1999 according to the World Values Survey,[17] both for traditionally strongly theist countries (Spain: 86.8%:81.1%; Ireland 94.8%:93.7%) and for traditionally secular countries (Sweden: 51.9%:46.6%; France 61.8%:56.1%; Netherlands 65.3%:58.0%). Some countries nevertheless show increase of theism over the period, Italy 84.1%:87.8%, Denmark 57.8%:62.1%. For a comprehensive study on Europe, see Mattei Dogan's "Religious Beliefs in Europe: Factors of Accelerated Decline" in Research in the Social Scientific Study of Religion.

Eurobarometer survey 2019 edit

Self described religion in the European Union (2019)[18]

  Roman Catholic (41%)
  Protestantism (9%)
  Other Christians (4%)
  Non believer/Agnostic (17%)
  Atheism (10%)
  Islam (2%)
  Other religion (4%)
  Refusal/Don't know (3%)
 
Largest (non-)religious group by EU member state according to Eurobarometer survey 2019.[19]
  More than 75% Catholic
  50–75% Catholic
  Relative Catholic majority
  50–75% Protestant
  More than 75% Orthodox
  50–75% non-religious
  Relative non-religious majority
  30% Catholic, 30% non-religious (Germany)

According to the 2019 Eurobarometer survey about Religiosity in the European Union Christianity is the largest religion in the European Union accounting 64% of the EU population,[18] down from 72% in 2012.[20] Catholics are the largest Christian group in EU, accounting for 41% of EU population, while Eastern Orthodox make up 10%, and Protestants make up 9%, and other Christians account for 4% of the EU population. Non believer/Agnostic account 17%, Atheist 10%, and Muslim 2% of the EU population. 3% refuse to answer or didn't know.[18]

Eurobarometer survey 2019[18]
Country "Atheist" "Non believer/Agnostic" "Atheist + Non believer/Agnostic"
  Romania 2% 2% 4%
  Malta 2% 2% 4%
  Cyprus 3% 4% 7%
  Poland 5% 4% 9%
  Lithuania 3% 6% 9%
  Greece 7% 4% 11%
  Slovakia 6% 5% 11%
  Croatia 6% 5% 11%
  Portugal 4% 8% 12%
  Ireland 7% 7% 14%
  Italy 5% 9% 14%
  Bulgaria 8% 7% 15%
  Austria 4% 12% 16%
  Slovenia 14% 4% 18%
  Latvia 6% 13% 19%
  Hungary 3% 17% 20%
  Denmark 9% 13% 22%
  Finland 10% 14% 24%
  Luxembourg 10% 16% 26%
  Germany 9% 21% 30%
  Belgium 10% 21% 31%
  Spain 12% 20% 32%
  United Kingdom 19% 20% 39%
  France 21% 19% 40%
  Estonia 21% 27% 48%
  Sweden 16% 34% 50%
  Netherlands 11% 41% 52%
  Czech Republic 22% 34% 56%
  EU28 10% 17% 27%

Maps edit

Pew Research Poll edit

According to the 2012 Global Religious Landscape survey by the Pew Research Center, 75.2% of the Europe residents are Christians, 18.2% are irreligious, atheist or agnostic, 5.9% are Muslims and 0.2% are Jews, 0.2% are Hindus, 0.2% are Buddhist, and 0.1% adhere to other religions.[21] According to the 2015 Religious Belief and National Belonging in Central and Eastern Europe survey by the Pew Research Center, 57.9% of the Central and Eastern Europeans identified as Orthodox Christians,[22] and according to a 2018 study by the Pew Research Center, 71.0% of Western Europeans identified as Christians, 24.0% identified as religiously unaffiliated and 5% identified as adhere to other religions.[23] According to the same study a large majority (83%) of those who were raised as Christians in Western Europe still identify as such, and the remainder mostly self-identify as religiously unaffiliated.[23]

Pew Research Poll edit

Pew Research Poll 2015[22]
Country Affiliated Orthodox,
Catholic or Muslim
(poll 1)
Unaffiliated
(poll 1)
Other/DK/ref
(poll 1)*
"Believe in God,
absolutely certain"
(poll 2)**
"Believe in God,
fairly certain"
(poll 2)**
"Believe in God,
not too/at all certain"
(poll 2)**
"Do not believe in God"
(Poll 2)**
Atheist
(poll 3)***
Agnostic
(poll 3)***
Nothing in particular
(poll 3)***
  Armenia 97 2 1 94 2 1 2 1 1
  Georgia 99 <1 1 93 2 2 1 <1
  Bosnia and Herzegovina 96 3 1 90 3 2 3 2 1
  Moldova 95 2 3 89 4 3 3 1 1
  Romania 91 1 8 64 28 2 4 1
  Serbia 94 4 1 73 16 3 5 2 1 1
  Croatia 90 7 3 72 14 5 5 4 2 1
  Greece 92 4 4 69 16 7 6 3 1
  Poland 88 7 5 45 35 5 8 2 1 4
  Lithuania 78 6 17 34 34 7 11 2 4
  Ukraine 88 7 5 32 45 6 9 3 4
  Bulgaria 91 5 4 30 40 7 17 2 1 2
  Latvia 54 21 25 28 34 7 15 3 18
  Belarus 86 3 11 26 47 11 9 2 1
  Hungary 57 21 22 26 26 7 30 5 16
  Russia 81 15 4 25 38 10 15 4 1 10
  Czech Republic 22 72 6 13 13 3 66 25 1 46
  Estonia 26 45 29 13 24 7 45 9 1 35

(*) 13% of respondents in Hungary identify as Presbyterian. In Estonia and Latvia, 20% and 19%, respectively, identify as Lutherans. And in Lithuania, 14% say they are "just a Christian" and do not specify a particular denomination. They are included in the "other" category.
(**) Identified as "don't know/refused" from the "other/idk/ref" column are excluded from this statistic.
(***) Figures may not add to subtotals due to rounding.

Pew research poll in 2017 ** [24]
Country A holy book (e.g. Bible) is written
by men, not the word of God
A holy book is the word of God
  Georgia
9%
88%
  Armenia
9%
87%
  Moldova
10%
87%
  Bosnia and Herzegovina
14%
81%
  Romania
18%
76%
  Ukraine
21%
63%
  Poland
24%
61%
  Serbia
28%
59%
  Greece
28%
58%
  Croatia
29%
58%
  Russia
30%
58%
  Belarus
27%
57%
  Bulgaria
41%
43%
  Lithuania
43%
42%
  Hungary
41%
41%
  Latvia
38%
40%
  Estonia
58%
26%
  Czech Republic
65%
21%

(**) Identified with answers "don't know/refused" are not shown.

Abrahamic religions edit

Bahá'í Faith edit

 
Bahá'í House of Worship, Langenhain, Germany

The first newspaper reference to the religious movement began with coverage of the Báb, whom Bahá'ís consider the forerunner of the Bahá'í Faith, which occurred in The Times on 1 November 1845, only a little over a year after the Báb first started his mission.[25] British, Russian, and other diplomats, businessmen, scholars, and world travelers also took note of the precursor Bábí religion[26] most notably in 1865 by Frenchman Arthur de Gobineau who wrote the first and most influential account. In April 1890 Edward G. Browne of Cambridge University met Bahá'u'lláh, the prophet-founder of the Bahá'í Faith, and left the only detailed description by a Westerner.[27]

Starting in the 1890s Europeans began to convert to the religion. In 1910 Bahá'u'lláh's son and appointed successor, 'Abdu'l-Bahá embarked on a three-year journey to including Europe and North America[28] and then wrote a series of letters that were compiled together in the book titled Tablets of the Divine Plan which included mention of the need to spread the religion in Europe following the war.[29]

A 1925 list of "leading local Bahá'í Centres" of Europe listed organized communities of many countries – the largest being in Germany.[30] However the religion was soon banned in a couple of countries: in 1937 Heinrich Himmler disbanded the Bahá'í Faith's institutions in Germany because of its 'international and pacifist tendencies'[31] and in Russia in 1938 "monstrous accusations" against Bahá'ís and a Soviet government policy of oppression of religion resulted in Bahá'í communities in 38 cities across Soviet territories ceasing to exist.[32] However the religion recovered in both countries. The religion has generally spread such that in recent years the Association of Religion Data Archives estimated the Bahá'ís in European countries to number in hundreds to tens of thousands.[33]

Christianity edit

 
Christianity in Europe by percentage (2010).[34]
 
View of St. Peter's Basilica in Vatican City, the largest European Roman Catholic Church
 
Cathedral of Saint Sava in Serbia is the largest Orthodox church in the world
 
The Alexander Nevsky Cathedral in Sofia is one of the largest Orthodox cathedrals
 
The St John's Church, Bergen is a Lutheran church in Norway
 
Calvinist Temple Saint-Étienne (Protestant St. Stephen's Church) in France

The majority of Europeans describe themselves as Christians, divided into a large number of denominations.[1] Christian denominations are usually classed in three categories: Catholicism (consider only two groups, the Roman-Latin Catholic and the Eastern Greek and Armenian Catholics), Orthodoxy (consider only two groups, the Eastern Byzantine Orthodox and the Armenian Apostolic which is within the Oriental Orthodox Church) and Protestantism (a diverse group including Lutheranism, Calvinism and Anglicanism as well as numerous minor denominations, including Baptists, Methodism, Evangelicalism, Pentecostalism, etc.).

Christianity, more specifically the Catholic Church, which played an important part in the shaping of Western civilization since at least the 4th century.[35][36] Historically, Europe has been the center and "cradle of Christian civilization".[37][38][39][40]

European culture, throughout most of its recent history, has been heavily influenced by Christian belief and has been nearly equivalent to Christian culture.[41] The Christian culture was one of the more dominant forces to influence Western civilization, concerning the course of philosophy, art, music, science, social structure and architecture.[41][42] The civilizing influence of Christianity includes social welfare,[43] founding hospitals,[44] economics (as the Protestant work ethic),[45][46] politics,[47] architecture,[48] literature[49] and family life.[50]

Christianity is still the largest religion in Europe.[51] According to a survey about Religiosity in the European Union in 2019 by Eurobarometer, Christianity was the largest religion in the European Union accounting 64% of EU population,[18] down from 72% in 2012.[20] Catholics were the largest Christian group in EU, and accounted for 41% of the EU population, while Eastern Orthodox made up 10%, Protestants made up 9%, and other Christians 4%.[18] According to a 2010 study by the Pew Research Center, 76.2% of the European population identified themselves as Christians,[52] constitute in absolute terms the world's largest Christian population.[53]

According to Scholars, in 2017, Europe's population was 77.8% Christian (up from 74.9% 1970),[54][55] these changes were largely result of the collapse of Communism and switching to Christianity in the former Soviet Union and Eastern Bloc countries.[54]

Christian denominations edit

There are numerous minor Protestant movements, including various Evangelical congregations.

Islam edit

 
Birmingham Central Mosque, the first mosque in the United Kingdom to use loudspeakers to broadcast the adhan.[57]

Islam came to parts of European islands and coasts on the Mediterranean Sea during the 8th-century Muslim conquests. In the Iberian Peninsula and parts of southern France, various Muslim states existed before the Reconquista; Islam spread in southern Italy briefly through the Emirate of Sicily and Emirate of Bari. During the Ottoman expansion, Islam was spread from into the Balkans and even part of Central Europe. Muslims have also been historically present in Ukraine (Crimea and vicinity, with the Crimean Tatars), as well as modern-day Russia, beginning with Volga Bulgaria in the 10th century and the conversion of the Golden Horde to Islam. In recent years,[when?] Muslims have migrated to Europe as residents and temporary workers.

According to the Pew Forum, the total number of Muslims in Europe in 2010 was about 44 million (6%).[58] While the total number of Muslims in the European Union in 2007 was about 16 million (3.2%).[59] Data from the 2000s for the rates of growth of Islam in Europe showed that the growing number of Muslims was due primarily to immigration and higher birth rates.[60]

Muslims make up 99% of the population in Turkey,[61] Northern Cyprus,[62][63] 96% in Kosovo,[64] 56% in Albania,[65][66] 51% in Bosnia and Herzegovina,[67] 32.17% in North Macedonia,[68][69] 20% in Montenegro,[70] between 10 and 15% in Russia,[71] 7–9% in France,[72][73][74] 8% in Bulgaria,[75] 6% in the Netherlands, 5% in Denmark, United Kingdom and Germany,[76][77][78] just over 4% in Switzerland and Austria, and between 3 and 4% in Greece.

A survey conducted by the Pew Research Center in 2016 found that Muslims make up 4.9% of all of Europe's population.[79] According to a same study conversion does not add significantly to the growth of the Muslim population in Europe, with roughly 160,000 more people leaving Islam than converting into Islam between 2010 and 2016.[79]

Judaism edit

 
The Jubilee Synagogue in Prague, Czech Republic

The Jews were dispersed within the Roman Empire from the 2nd century.[80] At one time Judaism was practiced widely throughout the European continent; throughout the Middle Ages, Jews were accused of ritual murder and faced pogroms and legal discrimination. The Holocaust perpetrated by Nazi Germany decimated the Jewish population, and today, France is home to the largest Jewish community in Europe with 1% of the total population (between 483,000 and 500,000 Jews).[81][82] Other European countries with notable Jewish populations include the United Kingdom (291,000 Jews),[82] Germany (119,000), and Russia (194,000) which is home to Eastern Europe's largest Jewish community.[82] The Jewish population of Europe in 2010 was estimated to be approximately 1.4 million (0.2% of European population) or 10% of the world's Jewish population.[83]

Deism edit

During the Enlightenment, Deism became influential especially in France, Germany, the Netherlands, and the United Kingdom. Biblical concepts were challenged by concepts such as a heliocentric universe and other scientific challenges to the Bible.[84] Notable early deists include Voltaire, Kant, and Mendeleev.[85]

Irreligion edit

The trend towards secularism during the 20th and 21st centuries has a number of reasons, depending on the individual country:

  • France has been traditionally laicist since the French Revolution. Today the country is 25%[86] to 32%[87] irreligious. The remaining population is made up evenly of both Christians and people who believe in a god or some form of spiritual life force, but are not involved in organized religion.[88] French society is still secular overall.
  • Some parts of Eastern Europe were secularized as a matter of state doctrine under communist rule in the countries of the former Eastern Bloc. Albania was an officially (and constitutionally binding) atheist state from 1967 to 1991.[89] The countries where the most people reported no religious belief were France (33%), the Czech Republic (30%), Belgium (27%), Netherlands (27%), Estonia (26%), Germany (25%), Sweden (23%) and Luxembourg (22%).[90] The region of Eastern Germany, which was also under communist rule, is by far the least religious region in Europe.[91][92] Other post-communist countries, however, have seen the opposite effect, with religion being very important in countries such as Romania, Lithuania and Poland.

The trend towards secularism has been less pronounced in the traditionally Catholic countries of Mediterranean Europe. Greece as the only traditionally Eastern Orthodox country in Europe which has not been part of the communist Eastern Bloc also retains a very high religiosity, with in excess of 95% of Greeks adhering to the Greek Orthodox Church.

According to a Pew Research Center Survey in 2012 the religiously unaffiliated (atheists and agnostics) make up about 18.2% of the European population in 2010.[93] According to the same survey the religiously unaffiliated make up the majority of the population in only two European countries: Czech Republic (76%) and Estonia (60%).[3] A newer study (released in 2015) found that in the Netherlands there is also an irreligious majority of 68%.[94]

Atheism and agnosticism edit

During the late 20th and early 21st centuries, atheism and agnosticism have increased, with falling church attendance and membership in various European countries.[95] The 2010 Eurobarometer survey found that on total average, of the EU28 population, 51% "believe there is a God", 26% "believe there is some sort of spirit or life force", and 20% "don't believe there is any sort of spirit, God or life force".[2] Across the EU, belief was higher among women, increased with age, those with a strict upbringing, those with the lowest level of formal education and those leaning towards right-wing politics.[90]: 10–11  Results were varied widely between different countries.[2]

According to a survey measuring religious identification in the European Union in 2019 by Eurobarometer, 10% of EU citizens identify themselves as atheists.[18] As of May 2019, the top seven European countries with the most people who viewed themselves as atheists were Czech Republic (22%), France (21%), Sweden (16%), Estonia (15%), Slovenia (14%), Spain (12%) and Netherlands (11%).[18] 17% of EU citizens called themselves non-believers or agnostics and this percentage was the highest in Netherlands (41%), Czech Republic (34%), Sweden (34%), United Kingdom (28%), Estonia (23%), Germany (21%) and Spain (20%).[18]

Modern Paganism edit

 
Esetrother community of the Íslenska Ásatrúarfélagið (Icelandic Esetroth Fellowship) preparing for a Þingblót at Þingvellir.
 
An Odinist-rite wedding in Spain, in 2010, at the Temple of Gaut in Albacete.

Germanic edit

Heathenism or Esetroth (Icelandic: Ásatrú), and the organised form Odinism, are names for the modern folk religion of the Germanic nations.

In the United Kingdom Census 2001, 300 people registered as Heathen in England and Wales.[96] However, many Heathens followed the advice of the Pagan Federation (PF) and simply described themselves as "Pagan", while other Heathens did not specify their religious beliefs.[96] In the 2011 census, 1,958 people self-identified as Heathen in England and Wales. A further 251 described themselves as Reconstructionist and may include some people reconstructing Germanic paganism.[97]

Ásatrúarfélagið (Esetroth Fellowship) was recognized as an official religion by the Icelandic government in 1973. For its first 20 years it was led by farmer and poet Sveinbjörn Beinteinsson. By 2003, it had 777 members,[98] and by 2014, it had 2,382 members, corresponding to 0.8% of Iceland's population.[99] In Iceland, Germanic religion has an impact larger than the number of its adherents.[100]

In Sweden, the Swedish Forn Sed Assembly (Forn Sed, or the archaic Forn Siðr, means "Old Custom") was formed in 1994 and is since 2007 recognized as a religious organization by the Swedish government. In Denmark Forn Siðr was formed in 1999, and was officially recognized in 2003[101] The Norwegian Åsatrufellesskapet Bifrost (Esetroth Fellowship Bifrost) was formed in 1996; as of 2011, the fellowship has some 300 members. Foreningen Forn Sed was formed in 1999, and has been recognized by the Norwegian government as a religious organization. In Spain there is the Odinist Community of Spain – Ásatrú.

Roman edit

The Roman polytheism also known as Religio Romana (Roman religion) in Latin or the Roman Way to the Gods (in Italian 'Via romana agli Déi') is alive in small communities and loosely related organizations, mainly in Italy.

Druidry edit

The religious development of Druidry was largely influenced by Iolo Morganwg.[102] Modern practises aim to imitate the practises of the Celtic peoples of the Iron Age.[103]

Official religions edit

A number of countries in Europe have official religions, including Greece (Orthodox),[104] Liechtenstein,[105] Malta,[106] Monaco,[107] the Vatican City (Catholic);[108] Armenia (Apostolic Orthodoxy); Denmark,[109] Iceland[110][111] and the United Kingdom (England alone) (Anglican).[112] In Switzerland, some cantons are officially Catholic, others Reformed Protestant. Some Swiss villages even have their religion as well as the village name written on the signs at their entrances.

Georgia, while technically has no official church per se, has special constitutional agreement with Georgian Orthodox Church, which enjoys de facto privileged status. Much the same applies in Germany with the Evangelical Church and the Roman Catholic Church, and the Jewish community. In Finland, both the Finnish Orthodox Church and the Lutheran Church are official. England, a part of the United Kingdom, has Anglicanism as its official religion. Scotland, another part of the UK, has Presbyterianism as its national church, but it is no longer "official". In Sweden, the national church used to be Lutheranism, but it is no longer "official" since 2000. Azerbaijan, Czech Republic, Germany, France, Ireland, Italy, Luxembourg, Portugal, Serbia, Romania, Russia, Spain and Turkey are officially secular.

Indian religions edit

Buddhism edit

Buddhism is thinly spread throughout Europe, and the fastest growing religion in recent years[113][114] with about 3 million adherents.[115][116] In Kalmykia, Tibetan Buddhism is prevalent.[117]

Hinduism edit

 
Mandir in Gibraltar.

Hinduism is mainly practised among Indian immigrants. It has been growing rapidly in recent years, notably in the United Kingdom, France, the Netherlands and Italy.[118] In 2010, there were an estimated 1.4 million Hindu adherents in Europe.[119]

Jainism edit

 
Jain temple in Antwerp, Belgium

Jainism, small membership rolls, mainly among Indian immigrants in Belgium and the United Kingdom, as well as several converts from western and northern Europe.[120][121]

Sikhism edit

Sikhism has nearly 700,000 adherents in Europe. Most of the community live in United Kingdom (450,000) and Italy (100,000).[122][123] Around 10,000 Sikhs live in Belgium and France.[124] Netherlands and Germany have a Sikh population of 22,000.[125][126] All other countries, such as Greece, have 5,000 or fewer Sikhs.

Other religions edit

Other religions represented in Europe include:

See also edit

References edit

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External links edit

  • Eurel: sociological and legal data on religions in Europe and beyond

religion, europe, religion, been, major, influence, societies, cultures, traditions, philosophies, artistic, expressions, laws, within, present, europe, largest, religion, europe, christianity, however, irreligion, practical, secularisation, also, prominent, s. Religion has been a major influence on the societies cultures traditions philosophies artistic expressions and laws within present day Europe The largest religion in Europe is Christianity 1 However irreligion and practical secularisation are also prominent in some countries 2 3 In Southeastern Europe three countries Bosnia and Herzegovina Kosovo and Albania have Muslim majorities with Christianity being the second largest religion in those countries Ancient European religions included veneration for deities such as Zeus Modern revival movements of these religions include Heathenism Rodnovery Romuva Druidry Wicca and others Smaller religions include Indian religions Judaism and some East Asian religions which are found in their largest groups in Britain France and Kalmykia Importance of Religion in Europe results of a 2008 2009 Gallup poll Predominance of Christianity in countries across Europe 2010 Little is known about the prehistoric religion of Neolithic Europe Bronze and Iron Age religion in Europe as elsewhere was predominantly polytheistic Ancient Greek religion Ancient Roman religion Basque mythology Finnish paganism Celtic polytheism Germanic paganism etc The Roman Empire officially adopted Christianity in AD 380 During the Early Middle Ages most of Europe underwent Christianization a process essentially complete with the Christianization of Scandinavia in the High Middle Ages The notion of Europe and the Western World has been intimately connected with the concept of Christendom and many even consider Christianity as the unifying belief that created a European identity 4 especially since Christianity in the Middle East was marginalized by the rise of Islam from the 8th century This confrontation led to the Crusades which ultimately failed militarily but were an important step in the emergence of a European identity based on religion Despite this traditions of folk religion continued at all times largely independent from institutional religion or dogmatic theology The Great Schism of the 11th century and Reformation of the 16th century tore apart Christendom into hostile factions and following the Age of Enlightenment of the 18th century atheism and agnosticism have spread across Europe Nineteenth century Orientalism contributed to a certain popularity of Hinduism and Buddhism and the 20th century brought increasing syncretism New Age and various new religious movements divorcing spirituality from inherited traditions for many Europeans Recent times have seen increased secularisation and religious pluralism 5 Contents 1 Religiosity 1 1 Gallup survey 2008 2009 1 2 Eurobarometer survey 2010 1 3 Eurobarometer survey 2019 1 3 1 Maps 1 4 Pew Research Poll 1 4 1 Pew Research Poll 2 Abrahamic religions 2 1 Baha i Faith 2 2 Christianity 2 2 1 Christian denominations 2 3 Islam 2 4 Judaism 3 Deism 4 Irreligion 4 1 Atheism and agnosticism 5 Modern Paganism 5 1 Germanic 5 2 Roman 5 3 Druidry 6 Official religions 7 Indian religions 7 1 Buddhism 7 2 Hinduism 7 3 Jainism 7 4 Sikhism 8 Other religions 9 See also 10 References 11 External linksReligiosity edit nbsp Data https www kaggle com umichigan world religions Some European countries have experienced a decline in church membership and church attendance 6 7 A relevant example of this trend is Sweden where the Church of Sweden previously the state church until 2000 claimed to have 82 9 of the Swedish population as its flock in 2000 Surveys showed this had dropped to 72 9 by 2008 8 and to 56 4 by 2019 9 Moreover in the 2005 Eurobarometer survey 23 10 of the Swedish population said that they do not believe there is any sort of spirit God or life force and in the 2010 Eurobarometer survey 34 2 said the same Gallup survey 2008 2009 edit This section needs to be updated Please help update this article to reflect recent events or newly available information June 2022 During 2008 2009 a Gallup survey asked in several countries the question Is religion important in your daily life The table and map below shows percentage of people who answered Yes to the question 11 12 nbsp Results of a 2008 2009 Gallup survey on whether respondents said that religion was important in their daily life 11 12 0 9 10 19 Estonia Sweden Denmark 20 29 Norway Czech Republic United Kingdom Finland 30 39 France Netherlands Belgium Bulgaria Russia Belarus Luxembourg Hungary Albania Latvia 40 49 Germany Switzerland Lithuania Kazakhstan Ukraine Slovenia Slovakia Spain 50 59 Azerbaijan Serbia Ireland Austria 60 69 70 79 Croatia Montenegro Greece Portugal Italy Poland Cyprus North Macedonia 80 89 Turkey Romania Malta Armenia Moldova Bosnia and Herzegovina 90 100 Kosovo Georgia No data Importance of Religion in Europe by Gallup Poll 2008 2009 11 12 Country Percentage nbsp Estonia 16 nbsp Sweden 17 nbsp Denmark 19 nbsp Norway 21 nbsp Czech Republic 21 nbsp United Kingdom 27 nbsp Finland 28 nbsp France 30 nbsp Netherlands 33 nbsp Belgium 33 nbsp Bulgaria 34 nbsp Russia 34 nbsp Belarus 34 nbsp Luxembourg 39 nbsp Hungary 39 nbsp Albania 39 nbsp Latvia 39 nbsp Germany 40 nbsp Switzerland 41 nbsp Lithuania 42 nbsp Kazakhstan 43 nbsp Ukraine 46 nbsp Slovenia 47 nbsp Slovakia 47 nbsp Spain 49 nbsp Azerbaijan 50 nbsp Serbia 54 nbsp Ireland 54 nbsp Austria 55 nbsp Croatia 70 nbsp Montenegro 71 nbsp Greece 71 nbsp Portugal 72 nbsp Italy 72 nbsp Poland 75 nbsp Cyprus 75 nbsp Romania 76 nbsp Bosnia and Herzegovina 80 nbsp Turkey 82 nbsp Malta 86 nbsp Moldova 88 nbsp Armenia 89 nbsp Kosovo 90 nbsp Georgia 90 During 2007 2008 a Gallup poll asked in several countries the question Does religion occupy an important place in your life The table on right shows percentage of people who answered No 13 Lack of Importance of Religion in Europe by Gallup poll 2007 2008 Country Percentage nbsp Estonia 84 nbsp Sweden 83 nbsp Denmark 80 nbsp Norway 78 nbsp Azerbaijan 74 nbsp Czech Republic 74 nbsp France 73 nbsp United Kingdom 71 nbsp Finland 69 nbsp Netherlands 66 nbsp Belarus 65 nbsp Russia 63 nbsp Albania 63 nbsp Bulgaria 62 nbsp Latvia 62 nbsp Belgium 61 nbsp Hungary 59 nbsp Slovenia 59 nbsp Spain 59 nbsp Germany 57 nbsp Switzerland 56 nbsp Ukraine 54 nbsp Lithuania 52 nbsp Slovakia 51 nbsp Austria 42 nbsp Ireland 42 nbsp Romania 31 nbsp Serbia 31 nbsp Croatia 30 nbsp Greece 30 nbsp Portugal 27 nbsp Montenegro 27 nbsp Italy 26 nbsp Cyprus 24 nbsp Poland 23 nbsp Bosnia and Herzegovina 19 nbsp North Macedonia 19 nbsp Malta 18 nbsp Moldova 11 nbsp Armenia 10 nbsp Turkey 9 nbsp Georgia 9 Eurobarometer survey 2010 edit nbsp Largest non religious group by EU member state 14 according to Eurobarometer survey 2010 2 More than 75 Catholic 50 75 Catholic Relative Catholic majority 50 75 Protestant More than 75 Orthodox 50 75 non religious Relative non religious majority More than 75 Muslim The 2010 Eurobarometer survey 2 found that on average 51 of the citizens of the EU member states state that they believe there is a God 26 believe there is some sort of spirit or life force while 20 don t believe there is any sort of spirit God or life force 3 declined to answer According to a recent study Dogan Mattei Religious Beliefs in Europe Factors of Accelerated Decline 47 of French people declared themselves as agnostics in 2003 This situation is often called Post Christian Europe A decrease in religiousness and church attendance in Denmark Belgium France Germany Netherlands and Sweden has been noted despite a concurrent increase in some countries like Greece 2 in 1 year The Eurobarometer survey must be taken with caution however as there are discrepancies between it and national census results For example in the United Kingdom the 2001 census revealed over 70 of the population regarded themselves as Christian with only 15 professing to have no religion though the wording of the question has been criticized as leading by the British Humanist Association 15 Romania one of the most religious countries in Europe witnessed a threefold increase in the number of atheists between 2002 and 2011 as revealed by the most recent national census 16 nbsp Eurobarometer survey 2005 chart results The following is a list of European countries ranked by religiosity based on the rate of belief according to the Eurobarometer survey 2010 2 The 2010 Eurobarometer survey asked whether the person believes there is a God believes there is some sort of spirit or life force or doesn t believe there is any sort of spirit God or life force Eurobarometer survey 2010 2 Country I believe there is a God I believe there is some sort of spirit or life force I don t believe there is any sort of spirit God or life force nbsp Malta 94 4 2 nbsp Romania 93 6 1 nbsp Cyprus 88 8 3 nbsp Poland 79 14 5 nbsp Greece 79 16 4 nbsp Italy 74 20 6 nbsp Ireland 70 20 7 nbsp Portugal 70 15 12 nbsp Slovakia 63 23 13 nbsp Spain 59 20 19 nbsp Lithuania 47 37 12 nbsp Luxembourg 46 22 24 nbsp Hungary 45 34 20 nbsp Austria 44 38 12 nbsp Germany 44 25 27 nbsp Latvia 38 48 11 nbsp United Kingdom 37 33 25 nbsp Belgium 37 31 27 nbsp Bulgaria 36 43 15 nbsp Finland 33 42 22 nbsp Slovenia 32 36 26 nbsp Denmark 28 47 24 nbsp Netherlands 28 39 30 nbsp France 27 27 40 nbsp Estonia 18 50 29 nbsp Sweden 18 45 34 nbsp Czech Republic 16 44 37 nbsp EU27 51 26 20 nbsp Turkey EUCU not EU 94 1 1 nbsp Croatia joined EU in 2013 69 22 7 nbsp Switzerland EFTA not EU 44 39 11 nbsp Iceland EFTA not EU 31 49 18 nbsp Norway EFTA not EU 22 44 29 The decrease in theism is illustrated in the 1981 and 1999 according to the World Values Survey 17 both for traditionally strongly theist countries Spain 86 8 81 1 Ireland 94 8 93 7 and for traditionally secular countries Sweden 51 9 46 6 France 61 8 56 1 Netherlands 65 3 58 0 Some countries nevertheless show increase of theism over the period Italy 84 1 87 8 Denmark 57 8 62 1 For a comprehensive study on Europe see Mattei Dogan s Religious Beliefs in Europe Factors of Accelerated Decline in Research in the Social Scientific Study of Religion Eurobarometer survey 2019 edit Self described religion in the European Union 2019 18 Roman Catholic 41 Eastern Orthodoxy 10 Protestantism 9 Other Christians 4 Non believer Agnostic 17 Atheism 10 Islam 2 Other religion 4 Refusal Don t know 3 nbsp Largest non religious group by EU member state according to Eurobarometer survey 2019 19 More than 75 Catholic 50 75 Catholic Relative Catholic majority 50 75 Protestant More than 75 Orthodox 50 75 non religious Relative non religious majority 30 Catholic 30 non religious Germany According to the 2019 Eurobarometer survey about Religiosity in the European Union Christianity is the largest religion in the European Union accounting 64 of the EU population 18 down from 72 in 2012 20 Catholics are the largest Christian group in EU accounting for 41 of EU population while Eastern Orthodox make up 10 and Protestants make up 9 and other Christians account for 4 of the EU population Non believer Agnostic account 17 Atheist 10 and Muslim 2 of the EU population 3 refuse to answer or didn t know 18 Eurobarometer survey 2019 18 Country Atheist Non believer Agnostic Atheist Non believer Agnostic nbsp Romania 2 2 4 nbsp Malta 2 2 4 nbsp Cyprus 3 4 7 nbsp Poland 5 4 9 nbsp Lithuania 3 6 9 nbsp Greece 7 4 11 nbsp Slovakia 6 5 11 nbsp Croatia 6 5 11 nbsp Portugal 4 8 12 nbsp Ireland 7 7 14 nbsp Italy 5 9 14 nbsp Bulgaria 8 7 15 nbsp Austria 4 12 16 nbsp Slovenia 14 4 18 nbsp Latvia 6 13 19 nbsp Hungary 3 17 20 nbsp Denmark 9 13 22 nbsp Finland 10 14 24 nbsp Luxembourg 10 16 26 nbsp Germany 9 21 30 nbsp Belgium 10 21 31 nbsp Spain 12 20 32 nbsp United Kingdom 19 20 39 nbsp France 21 19 40 nbsp Estonia 21 27 48 nbsp Sweden 16 34 50 nbsp Netherlands 11 41 52 nbsp Czech Republic 22 34 56 nbsp EU28 10 17 27 Maps edit nbsp Belief There is a God per country based on Eurobarometer 2005 survey nbsp Belief there is some sort of spirit or life force per country based on Eurobarometer 2005 survey nbsp No belief in any sort of spirit God or life force per country based on Eurobarometer 2005 survey nbsp Belief there is a God per country based on Eurobarometer 2010 survey nbsp Belief there is some sort of spirit or life force per country based on Eurobarometer 2010 survey nbsp No belief in any sort of spirit God or life force per country based on Eurobarometer 2010 survey Pew Research Poll edit According to the 2012 Global Religious Landscape survey by the Pew Research Center 75 2 of the Europe residents are Christians 18 2 are irreligious atheist or agnostic 5 9 are Muslims and 0 2 are Jews 0 2 are Hindus 0 2 are Buddhist and 0 1 adhere to other religions 21 According to the 2015 Religious Belief and National Belonging in Central and Eastern Europe survey by the Pew Research Center 57 9 of the Central and Eastern Europeans identified as Orthodox Christians 22 and according to a 2018 study by the Pew Research Center 71 0 of Western Europeans identified as Christians 24 0 identified as religiously unaffiliated and 5 identified as adhere to other religions 23 According to the same study a large majority 83 of those who were raised as Christians in Western Europe still identify as such and the remainder mostly self identify as religiously unaffiliated 23 Pew Research Poll edit Pew Research Poll 2015 22 Country Affiliated Orthodox Catholic or Muslim poll 1 Unaffiliated poll 1 Other DK ref poll 1 Believe in God absolutely certain poll 2 Believe in God fairly certain poll 2 Believe in God not too at all certain poll 2 Do not believe in God Poll 2 Atheist poll 3 Agnostic poll 3 Nothing in particular poll 3 nbsp Armenia 97 2 1 94 2 1 2 1 1 nbsp Georgia 99 lt 1 1 93 2 2 1 lt 1 nbsp Bosnia and Herzegovina 96 3 1 90 3 2 3 2 1 nbsp Moldova 95 2 3 89 4 3 3 1 1 nbsp Romania 91 1 8 64 28 2 4 1 nbsp Serbia 94 4 1 73 16 3 5 2 1 1 nbsp Croatia 90 7 3 72 14 5 5 4 2 1 nbsp Greece 92 4 4 69 16 7 6 3 1 nbsp Poland 88 7 5 45 35 5 8 2 1 4 nbsp Lithuania 78 6 17 34 34 7 11 2 4 nbsp Ukraine 88 7 5 32 45 6 9 3 4 nbsp Bulgaria 91 5 4 30 40 7 17 2 1 2 nbsp Latvia 54 21 25 28 34 7 15 3 18 nbsp Belarus 86 3 11 26 47 11 9 2 1 nbsp Hungary 57 21 22 26 26 7 30 5 16 nbsp Russia 81 15 4 25 38 10 15 4 1 10 nbsp Czech Republic 22 72 6 13 13 3 66 25 1 46 nbsp Estonia 26 45 29 13 24 7 45 9 1 35 13 of respondents in Hungary identify as Presbyterian In Estonia and Latvia 20 and 19 respectively identify as Lutherans And in Lithuania 14 say they are just a Christian and do not specify a particular denomination They are included in the other category Identified as don t know refused from the other idk ref column are excluded from this statistic Figures may not add to subtotals due to rounding Pew research poll in 2017 24 Country A holy book e g Bible is written by men not the word of God A holy book is the word of God nbsp Georgia 9 88 nbsp Armenia 9 87 nbsp Moldova 10 87 nbsp Bosnia and Herzegovina 14 81 nbsp Romania 18 76 nbsp Ukraine 21 63 nbsp Poland 24 61 nbsp Serbia 28 59 nbsp Greece 28 58 nbsp Croatia 29 58 nbsp Russia 30 58 nbsp Belarus 27 57 nbsp Bulgaria 41 43 nbsp Lithuania 43 42 nbsp Hungary 41 41 nbsp Latvia 38 40 nbsp Estonia 58 26 nbsp Czech Republic 65 21 Identified with answers don t know refused are not shown Abrahamic religions editBaha i Faith edit Main article Baha i Faith in Europe nbsp Baha i House of Worship Langenhain Germany The first newspaper reference to the religious movement began with coverage of the Bab whom Baha is consider the forerunner of the Baha i Faith which occurred in The Times on 1 November 1845 only a little over a year after the Bab first started his mission 25 British Russian and other diplomats businessmen scholars and world travelers also took note of the precursor Babi religion 26 most notably in 1865 by Frenchman Arthur de Gobineau who wrote the first and most influential account In April 1890 Edward G Browne of Cambridge University met Baha u llah the prophet founder of the Baha i Faith and left the only detailed description by a Westerner 27 Starting in the 1890s Europeans began to convert to the religion In 1910 Baha u llah s son and appointed successor Abdu l Baha embarked on a three year journey to including Europe and North America 28 and then wrote a series of letters that were compiled together in the book titled Tablets of the Divine Plan which included mention of the need to spread the religion in Europe following the war 29 A 1925 list of leading local Baha i Centres of Europe listed organized communities of many countries the largest being in Germany 30 However the religion was soon banned in a couple of countries in 1937 Heinrich Himmler disbanded the Baha i Faith s institutions in Germany because of its international and pacifist tendencies 31 and in Russia in 1938 monstrous accusations against Baha is and a Soviet government policy of oppression of religion resulted in Baha i communities in 38 cities across Soviet territories ceasing to exist 32 However the religion recovered in both countries The religion has generally spread such that in recent years the Association of Religion Data Archives estimated the Baha is in European countries to number in hundreds to tens of thousands 33 Christianity edit Main article Christianity in Europe nbsp Christianity in Europe by percentage 2010 34 nbsp View of St Peter s Basilica in Vatican City the largest European Roman Catholic Church nbsp Cathedral of Saint Sava in Serbia is the largest Orthodox church in the world nbsp The Alexander Nevsky Cathedral in Sofia is one of the largest Orthodox cathedrals nbsp The St John s Church Bergen is a Lutheran church in Norway nbsp Calvinist Temple Saint Etienne Protestant St Stephen s Church in France The majority of Europeans describe themselves as Christians divided into a large number of denominations 1 Christian denominations are usually classed in three categories Catholicism consider only two groups the Roman Latin Catholic and the Eastern Greek and Armenian Catholics Orthodoxy consider only two groups the Eastern Byzantine Orthodox and the Armenian Apostolic which is within the Oriental Orthodox Church and Protestantism a diverse group including Lutheranism Calvinism and Anglicanism as well as numerous minor denominations including Baptists Methodism Evangelicalism Pentecostalism etc Christianity more specifically the Catholic Church which played an important part in the shaping of Western civilization since at least the 4th century 35 36 Historically Europe has been the center and cradle of Christian civilization 37 38 39 40 European culture throughout most of its recent history has been heavily influenced by Christian belief and has been nearly equivalent to Christian culture 41 The Christian culture was one of the more dominant forces to influence Western civilization concerning the course of philosophy art music science social structure and architecture 41 42 The civilizing influence of Christianity includes social welfare 43 founding hospitals 44 economics as the Protestant work ethic 45 46 politics 47 architecture 48 literature 49 and family life 50 Christianity is still the largest religion in Europe 51 According to a survey about Religiosity in the European Union in 2019 by Eurobarometer Christianity was the largest religion in the European Union accounting 64 of EU population 18 down from 72 in 2012 20 Catholics were the largest Christian group in EU and accounted for 41 of the EU population while Eastern Orthodox made up 10 Protestants made up 9 and other Christians 4 18 According to a 2010 study by the Pew Research Center 76 2 of the European population identified themselves as Christians 52 constitute in absolute terms the world s largest Christian population 53 According to Scholars in 2017 Europe s population was 77 8 Christian up from 74 9 1970 54 55 these changes were largely result of the collapse of Communism and switching to Christianity in the former Soviet Union and Eastern Bloc countries 54 Christian denominations edit This article may contain an excessive amount of intricate detail that may interest only a particular audience Please help by spinning off or relocating any relevant information and removing excessive detail that may be against Wikipedia s inclusion policy August 2017 Learn how and when to remove this template message This article s factual accuracy is disputed Relevant discussion may be found on the talk page Please help to ensure that disputed statements are reliably sourced December 2017 Learn how and when to remove this template message Catholicism majorly followed to the Roman Latin Catholic Church with various minorities of the few Greek Catholic Churches in the Eastern European regions and the Armenian Catholic Church in Armenia and its diaspora is the largest denomination with adherents mostly existing in Latin Europe which includes France 56 Italy 56 Spain 56 Portugal 56 Malta 56 San Marino 56 Monaco 56 Vatican City 56 southern Wallon Belgium 56 Czech Republic Ireland 56 Lithuania 56 Poland 56 Hungary 56 Slovakia 56 Slovenia 56 Croatia 56 western Ukraine parts of Bosnia and Herzegovina Mostly in predominantly Croat areas but also the southern parts of Germanic Europe which includes Austria Luxembourg northern Flemish Belgium southern and western Germany parts of the Netherlands parts of Switzerland and Liechtenstein Orthodox Christianity the churches are in full communion i e the national churches are united in theological concept and part of the One Holy Catholic and Apostolic Eastern Orthodox Church Ecumenical Patriarchate of Constantinople Russian Orthodox Church Serbian Orthodox Church Romanian Orthodox Church Church of Greece Bulgarian Orthodox Church Georgian Orthodox Church Finnish Orthodox Church Cypriot Orthodox Church Albanian Orthodox Church Polish Orthodox Church Church of the Czech Lands and Slovakia Ukrainian Orthodox Church Turkish Orthodox Church Macedonian Orthodox Church Ohrid Archbishopric Montenegrin Orthodox Church Oriental Orthodoxy Armenian Apostolic Church Armenian Patriarchate of Constantinople Protestantism Lutheranism Independent Evangelical Lutheran Church Danish National Church Estonian Evangelical Lutheran Church Evangelical Lutheran Church of Finland United Protestant Church of France Protestant Church in Germany Evangelical Lutheran Church in Hungary Evangelical Lutheran Church of Latvia Church of Norway Church of Sweden Anglicanism Church of England Church of Ireland Scottish Episcopal Church Church in Wales Lusitanian Catholic Apostolic Evangelical Church Spanish Reformed Episcopal Church Calvinism United Reformed Church Evangelical Presbyterian Church in England and Wales Reformed Church in Hungary Church of Scotland Presbyterian Church in Ireland Methodist Church of Great Britain Protestant Church in the Netherlands Neo Calvinism United Protestant Church of France Swiss Reformed Church Restorationism The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter day Saints Jehovah s Witnesses Other Baptist Union of Great Britain Baptist Union of Sweden Bruderhof Communities Seventh day Adventist Church There are numerous minor Protestant movements including various Evangelical congregations Islam edit Further information Islam in Europe nbsp Birmingham Central Mosque the first mosque in the United Kingdom to use loudspeakers to broadcast the adhan 57 Islam came to parts of European islands and coasts on the Mediterranean Sea during the 8th century Muslim conquests In the Iberian Peninsula and parts of southern France various Muslim states existed before the Reconquista Islam spread in southern Italy briefly through the Emirate of Sicily and Emirate of Bari During the Ottoman expansion Islam was spread from into the Balkans and even part of Central Europe Muslims have also been historically present in Ukraine Crimea and vicinity with the Crimean Tatars as well as modern day Russia beginning with Volga Bulgaria in the 10th century and the conversion of the Golden Horde to Islam In recent years when Muslims have migrated to Europe as residents and temporary workers According to the Pew Forum the total number of Muslims in Europe in 2010 was about 44 million 6 58 While the total number of Muslims in the European Union in 2007 was about 16 million 3 2 59 Data from the 2000s for the rates of growth of Islam in Europe showed that the growing number of Muslims was due primarily to immigration and higher birth rates 60 Muslims make up 99 of the population in Turkey 61 Northern Cyprus 62 63 96 in Kosovo 64 56 in Albania 65 66 51 in Bosnia and Herzegovina 67 32 17 in North Macedonia 68 69 20 in Montenegro 70 between 10 and 15 in Russia 71 7 9 in France 72 73 74 8 in Bulgaria 75 6 in the Netherlands 5 in Denmark United Kingdom and Germany 76 77 78 just over 4 in Switzerland and Austria and between 3 and 4 in Greece A survey conducted by the Pew Research Center in 2016 found that Muslims make up 4 9 of all of Europe s population 79 According to a same study conversion does not add significantly to the growth of the Muslim population in Europe with roughly 160 000 more people leaving Islam than converting into Islam between 2010 and 2016 79 Judaism edit nbsp The Jubilee Synagogue in Prague Czech Republic Further information History of the Jews in Europe Jews and Judaism in Europe and Jews by country The Jews were dispersed within the Roman Empire from the 2nd century 80 At one time Judaism was practiced widely throughout the European continent throughout the Middle Ages Jews were accused of ritual murder and faced pogroms and legal discrimination The Holocaust perpetrated by Nazi Germany decimated the Jewish population and today France is home to the largest Jewish community in Europe with 1 of the total population between 483 000 and 500 000 Jews 81 82 Other European countries with notable Jewish populations include the United Kingdom 291 000 Jews 82 Germany 119 000 and Russia 194 000 which is home to Eastern Europe s largest Jewish community 82 The Jewish population of Europe in 2010 was estimated to be approximately 1 4 million 0 2 of European population or 10 of the world s Jewish population 83 Deism editMain article Deism During the Enlightenment Deism became influential especially in France Germany the Netherlands and the United Kingdom Biblical concepts were challenged by concepts such as a heliocentric universe and other scientific challenges to the Bible 84 Notable early deists include Voltaire Kant and Mendeleev 85 Irreligion editFurther information Secularism Irreligion and Postchristianity The trend towards secularism during the 20th and 21st centuries has a number of reasons depending on the individual country France has been traditionally laicist since the French Revolution Today the country is 25 86 to 32 87 irreligious The remaining population is made up evenly of both Christians and people who believe in a god or some form of spiritual life force but are not involved in organized religion 88 French society is still secular overall Some parts of Eastern Europe were secularized as a matter of state doctrine under communist rule in the countries of the former Eastern Bloc Albania was an officially and constitutionally binding atheist state from 1967 to 1991 89 The countries where the most people reported no religious belief were France 33 the Czech Republic 30 Belgium 27 Netherlands 27 Estonia 26 Germany 25 Sweden 23 and Luxembourg 22 90 The region of Eastern Germany which was also under communist rule is by far the least religious region in Europe 91 92 Other post communist countries however have seen the opposite effect with religion being very important in countries such as Romania Lithuania and Poland The trend towards secularism has been less pronounced in the traditionally Catholic countries of Mediterranean Europe Greece as the only traditionally Eastern Orthodox country in Europe which has not been part of the communist Eastern Bloc also retains a very high religiosity with in excess of 95 of Greeks adhering to the Greek Orthodox Church According to a Pew Research Center Survey in 2012 the religiously unaffiliated atheists and agnostics make up about 18 2 of the European population in 2010 93 According to the same survey the religiously unaffiliated make up the majority of the population in only two European countries Czech Republic 76 and Estonia 60 3 A newer study released in 2015 found that in the Netherlands there is also an irreligious majority of 68 94 Atheism and agnosticism edit Main articles Atheism and Agnosticism During the late 20th and early 21st centuries atheism and agnosticism have increased with falling church attendance and membership in various European countries 95 The 2010 Eurobarometer survey found that on total average of the EU28 population 51 believe there is a God 26 believe there is some sort of spirit or life force and 20 don t believe there is any sort of spirit God or life force 2 Across the EU belief was higher among women increased with age those with a strict upbringing those with the lowest level of formal education and those leaning towards right wing politics 90 10 11 Results were varied widely between different countries 2 According to a survey measuring religious identification in the European Union in 2019 by Eurobarometer 10 of EU citizens identify themselves as atheists 18 As of May 2019 update the top seven European countries with the most people who viewed themselves as atheists were Czech Republic 22 France 21 Sweden 16 Estonia 15 Slovenia 14 Spain 12 and Netherlands 11 18 17 of EU citizens called themselves non believers or agnostics and this percentage was the highest in Netherlands 41 Czech Republic 34 Sweden 34 United Kingdom 28 Estonia 23 Germany 21 and Spain 20 18 Modern Paganism edit nbsp Esetrother community of the Islenska Asatruarfelagid Icelandic Esetroth Fellowship preparing for a THingblot at THingvellir nbsp An Odinist rite wedding in Spain in 2010 at the Temple of Gaut in Albacete See also Neopaganism in German speaking Europe Ireland Latin Europe the United Kingdom Slavic neopaganism and Baltic neopaganism Germanic edit Main article Germanic neopaganism Further information Heathenry in the United Kingdom Neopaganism in Scandinavia Neopaganism in Germany and Austria and Neopaganism in Latin Europe Heathenism or Esetroth Icelandic Asatru and the organised form Odinism are names for the modern folk religion of the Germanic nations In the United Kingdom Census 2001 300 people registered as Heathen in England and Wales 96 However many Heathens followed the advice of the Pagan Federation PF and simply described themselves as Pagan while other Heathens did not specify their religious beliefs 96 In the 2011 census 1 958 people self identified as Heathen in England and Wales A further 251 described themselves as Reconstructionist and may include some people reconstructing Germanic paganism 97 Asatruarfelagid Esetroth Fellowship was recognized as an official religion by the Icelandic government in 1973 For its first 20 years it was led by farmer and poet Sveinbjorn Beinteinsson By 2003 it had 777 members 98 and by 2014 it had 2 382 members corresponding to 0 8 of Iceland s population 99 In Iceland Germanic religion has an impact larger than the number of its adherents 100 In Sweden the Swedish Forn Sed Assembly Forn Sed or the archaic Forn Sidr means Old Custom was formed in 1994 and is since 2007 recognized as a religious organization by the Swedish government In Denmark Forn Sidr was formed in 1999 and was officially recognized in 2003 101 The Norwegian Asatrufellesskapet Bifrost Esetroth Fellowship Bifrost was formed in 1996 as of 2011 the fellowship has some 300 members Foreningen Forn Sed was formed in 1999 and has been recognized by the Norwegian government as a religious organization In Spain there is the Odinist Community of Spain Asatru Roman edit The Roman polytheism also known as Religio Romana Roman religion in Latin or the Roman Way to the Gods in Italian Via romana agli Dei is alive in small communities and loosely related organizations mainly in Italy Druidry edit The religious development of Druidry was largely influenced by Iolo Morganwg 102 Modern practises aim to imitate the practises of the Celtic peoples of the Iron Age 103 Official religions editA number of countries in Europe have official religions including Greece Orthodox 104 Liechtenstein 105 Malta 106 Monaco 107 the Vatican City Catholic 108 Armenia Apostolic Orthodoxy Denmark 109 Iceland 110 111 and the United Kingdom England alone Anglican 112 In Switzerland some cantons are officially Catholic others Reformed Protestant Some Swiss villages even have their religion as well as the village name written on the signs at their entrances Georgia while technically has no official church per se has special constitutional agreement with Georgian Orthodox Church which enjoys de facto privileged status Much the same applies in Germany with the Evangelical Church and the Roman Catholic Church and the Jewish community In Finland both the Finnish Orthodox Church and the Lutheran Church are official England a part of the United Kingdom has Anglicanism as its official religion Scotland another part of the UK has Presbyterianism as its national church but it is no longer official In Sweden the national church used to be Lutheranism but it is no longer official since 2000 Azerbaijan Czech Republic Germany France Ireland Italy Luxembourg Portugal Serbia Romania Russia Spain and Turkey are officially secular Indian religions editBuddhism edit Main article Buddhism in Europe Buddhism is thinly spread throughout Europe and the fastest growing religion in recent years 113 114 with about 3 million adherents 115 116 In Kalmykia Tibetan Buddhism is prevalent 117 Hinduism edit nbsp Mandir in Gibraltar Hinduism is mainly practised among Indian immigrants It has been growing rapidly in recent years notably in the United Kingdom France the Netherlands and Italy 118 In 2010 there were an estimated 1 4 million Hindu adherents in Europe 119 Jainism edit nbsp Jain temple in Antwerp Belgium Jainism small membership rolls mainly among Indian immigrants in Belgium and the United Kingdom as well as several converts from western and northern Europe 120 121 Sikhism edit Sikhism has nearly 700 000 adherents in Europe Most of the community live in United Kingdom 450 000 and Italy 100 000 122 123 Around 10 000 Sikhs live in Belgium and France 124 Netherlands and Germany have a Sikh population of 22 000 125 126 All other countries such as Greece have 5 000 or fewer Sikhs Other religions editThis article may contain an excessive amount of intricate detail that may interest only a particular audience Please help by spinning off or relocating any relevant information and removing excessive detail that may be against Wikipedia s inclusion policy February 2016 Learn how and when to remove this template message Other religions represented in Europe include Animism Confucianism Eckankar Ietsism Raelism Beliefs of the Romani people Romuva Satanism Shinto Spiritualism Taoism Thelema Unitarian Universalism Yazidism Zoroastrianism Rastafari communities in the United Kingdom France Spain Portugal Italy and elsewhere Traditional African Religions including Muti mainly in the United Kingdom and France including West African Vodun and Haitian Vodou Voodoo mainly among West African and black Caribbean immigrants in the UK and France See also editBuddhism by country Christianity in Europe Europeanism Hinduism by country Irreligion no faith by country Islam by country Judaism by country List of religious populations Major world religions Protestantism by country Post Christianity Religion in the European Union Roman Catholicism by countryReferences edit a b Europe Encyclopaedia Britannica Retrieved 15 January 2016 Most Europeans adhere to one of three broad divisions of Christianity Roman Catholicism in the west and southwest Protestantism in the north and Eastern Orthodoxy in the east and southeast a b c d e f g h 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