It developed in Europe, all the major conclave and council which formulated the doctrine of the Christian religion were held in Europe and were dominated by Europeans, it was Europeans who decided on the Canon of the Bible.
Alright, now I know you don't know Christian history. The seven ecumenical councils which define standard Christian doctrine today were attended overwhelmingly by Egyptian, Syrian, Carthaginian, Cappadocian, Judaean and Greek Christians. Of those, only the Greek bishops represented Europe. Only a few token representatives from Gaul, Italy, Germania or Hispania ever attended, and they were less than a dozen out of hundreds at any given council. The Seven Ecumenical Councils are:
1: The First Council of Nicaea, held in Asia Minor, attended overwhelmingly by Egyptian, Syrian, Carthaginian, Cappadocian, Judaean and Greek Christians. Of those, only the Greek bishops and the two Roman legates represented Europe.
2: The First Council of Constantinople, right on the dividing line between Europe and Asia.
3: The Council of Ephesus, which was also in Asia Minor.
4: The Council of Chalcedon, also in Asia Minor.
5: The Second Council of Constantinople.
6: The Third Council of Constantinople.
7: The Second Council of Nicaea.
These seven councils clarified and put to words the dogmas concerning the nature of the Trinity and the hypostatic union of Christ's true humanity and true divinity. So much for "all the major conclaves and councils which formulated the doctrine of the Christian religion" being held in Europe.
The five primary sees of Christianity in the early centuries of the Church were Rome, Constantinople, Alexandria, Antioch and Jerusalem. Three of these five are Middle Eastern, not European. The local synods that were later ratified and accepted by the Ecumenical Councils which defined Christian practice and ecclesiastical structure were overwhelmingly held in North Africa (Carthage) and the Middle East (Antioch and Laodicea, among others). St. Augustine of Hippo was a North African, not a European. The first man to list out the twenty-seven books of the New Testament as we know them today was St. Athanasius of Alexandria, an Egyptian. Christian monasticism originated in the deserts of Egypt, Palestine and Syria.
Check your Eurocentrism. If you told any of the Syriac, Coptic or Palestinian Christians that their faith was a European one, you'd be laughed out of the room while they handed you some history books and showed you the icons of all the Church Fathers.