Berthold of Garsten
Berthold of Garsten | |
---|---|
Statue at Melk Abbey. | |
Priest | |
Born | c. 1060 |
Died |
27 July 1142 (aged 72) Garsten, Austria |
Venerated in | Roman Catholic Church |
Beatified | 8 January 1970, Vatican City by Pope Paul VI |
Major shrine | Garsten Abbey, Austria |
Feast | 27 July |
Attributes |
|
Blessed Berthold of Garsten (c. 1060 - 27 July 1142) was a German priest.[1]
He is believed to be of the house of the Counts of Bogen and "Vögte" of the Regensburg Cathedral. He was to begin his pastoral career as a Benedictine monk at Saint Blaise in the Black Forest and was then - in 1107 - appointed prior at Göttweig. Ottokar II of Styria entrusted him with the development of the Garsten Abbey of which he became the first abbot in 1111. In this post he distinguished himself by his piety, kindness, devotion to his pastoral duties and organisational talent. Berthold introduced the Hirsau Reforms into Austria.
He died on 27 1142 and is buried in Garsten Abbey. His feast day is celebrated in the Diocese of Linz as well as the Diocese of St. Pölten and the Archdiocese of Salzburg on 27 July. He was beatified in 1970.
References
- Lenzenweger, J., 1958. Berthold von Garsten (with the Vita Bertholdi)
- ↑ Butler's Lives of the Saints Alban Butler, Paul Burns - 1995 Volume 7 - Page 221 "Bd Berthold of Garsten, Abbot (c. 1075-1142) Berthold de Rachez was born toward the end of the eleventh century on the shores of Lake Constance (the Bodensee). One account says that he married but that his wife died when he was about ..."