in progress, and was especially solicitous for a
better education of the clergy. He courageously
resisted the heretical tendencies of many humanists
and, though friendly disposed towards the better
ones, scatliingly rebuked others. To guard against
impure literature he established in his diocese, on
4 January, 1486, a censorship of the press, which
was the first in history. Berthold had long been
dissatisfied with the many pecuniary demands of
Rome upon Germany and the improprieties that
often accompanied the preaching of indulgences,
and shortly before his death he respectfully submitted
these grievances of the German nation to
Pope Pius III, who had just succeeded Alexander
VI. He is buried in the Cathedral of Mainz, where
a magnificent monument perpetuates his memory.
Weckerle, De Bertholdi Hennebergensis archiep. Mog. studiis politicis (Münster, 1868); Jansen, Geschichte des deutschen Volkes seit dem Ausgang des Mittelalters (Freiburg im Breisgau, 1893) I, passim (tr., St. Louis); Max Jansen, Kaiser Maximilian I (Munich, 1905), 65 sq.
Michael Ott..
Berthold of Ratisbon, a Franciscan of the
monastery of tluit city and the most powerful
preacher of repentance in the thirteenth century,
b. about 1210; d. at Ratisbon, 14 December, 1272.
He was probably a member of a well-to-do middle
class family of Ratisbon named Sachs. The excellence
of his literary training is proved by his
sermons which show more than common acquaintance
with the ancient classics. From his knowledge
of the usages of secular life, it may be inferred that
he was a man of mature age before he entered the
monastery. The first fixed date in Berthold's life
is 1246, when the papal legate appointed him and
David of Augsburg inspectors of the convent of
Niedermunster, a proof of the high regard in which
Berthold was then held. One of his contemporaries,
the Abbot of Niederaltaich, who is a reliable historian,
speaks in 1250 of the great reputation that
Berthold had in Bavaria as a preacher. Four years
later the missionary trips of this preacher extended
as far as the valley of the Rhine, Alsace, and Switzerland.
During the next ten years Berthold's apos-
tolic labours led him eastward into Austria, Mo-
ravia, Bohemia, and Silesia. In 1263 Pope Urban IV
appointed him to preach the Crusade and Albert the
Great was designated as his assistant.
When speaking to Slavonic audiences Berthold naturally employed an interpreter, just as St. Bernard, in his day, made use of an interpreter in Germany. Notwithstanding any difficulties that might arise as to speech, wherever he went Berthold exerted an extraordinary power of attraction over liis hearers so that the churches were not able to hold the great crowds of plain people who came from all quarters to his services, and he was often obliged to preach in the open air. When this was the case, a pulpit was generally arranged under the spreading brandies of a linden tree. Long after his day "Berthold's linden" was to be seen at Glatz. About 1270 he seems to have returned to Ratisbon where he remained the rest of his life. The Franciscan martyrology includes his name among the blessed of the order, and his remains form the most precious relic among the treasures of the cathedral at Ratisbon. The poets and chroniclers of his time made frequent reference to Berthold. He was called "sweet Brother Berthold", "the beloved of God and man", "a second Elias", "the teacher of the nations"; all of these expressions are proofs of the high esteem in which liis activities were held. The secret of the preacher's success lay partly in the saintliness of his life and partly in his power to make use of the language of humble life. He became the great master, it may be said, the classic of homely speech, and this rank has been maintained by his sermons to the present day. One of his two popular discourses on the Last Judgment became a favourite book of the people under the title "The Valley of Josaphat.
There is no doubt that Brother Berthold preached in German. For a long time, however, scholars disagreed as to how his sermons had been preserved. It is now generally accepted that the sermons were often written down afterwards in Latin, frequently with marginal comments in German; these reports of the sermons, as they may be called, partly German, partly Latin, or at times in the language in which they were delivered, are what have been handed down to posterity. The discourses thus preserved are of the greatest importance for the history of the development of the literature of homiletics; they are of equal value as rich sources for determining the condition of education and culture in the thirteenth century. It is difficult, therefore, to understand how this greatest of German preachers to the poor could have been forgotten for centuries. It was not until some of Brother Berthold's sermons were published in 1824 that attention was called to the eloquent Franciscan. Since this date, the enthusiasm for Berthold has grown steadily so that he has become a favourite, both of Germanic scholars and of the historians of the development of German civilization. He is also regarded as the great pattern of homely pulpit eloquence.
Kling, Bertholds, des Franziskaners, deutsche Predigten (Berlin, 1824); Pfeiffer und Strobl, Berthold von Regensburg (Vienna, 1862, 1880); Göbel, Die Missionspredigten des Franziskaners Berthold von Regensburg, in jetziger Schriftsprache (Ratisbon, 1873); Hötzl, Beati Fr. Bertholdi a Ratisbona sermones ad religiosos (Munich. 1882); Unkel, Berthold von Regensburg (Cologne, 1882); Stromberger, Berthold von Regensburg (Güterslob, 1877); Michael, Gesch. des deutschen Volkes vom 13. Jahrh. bis zum Ausgange des M. A. (Freiburg im Br., 1897), II, III, 144-180.
N. Scheid.
Berthold of Reichenau, a Benedictine monk
and chronicler of the celebrated Abbey of Reichenau
on the Lake of Constance; d. probably in 10S8. He
was a disciple and friend of the learned Hermannus
Contractus. When Hermann saw death approaching,
he entrusted to Berthold all the wax tablets that
contained the writings which he had not yet com-
mitted to parchment and commissioned Berthold to
peruse them and, after careful revision, to copy them
on parchment. Berthold was also exhorted by his
dying master to continue the famous world-chronicle,
begun by Hermann, which in chronological order related
the history of the world from the birth of Christ
to 1054, the year in which Hermann died. To the
continuation of this chronicle and to a biography of
his master and friend, Hermannus Contractus, is due
whatever fame is attached to the name of Berthold.
The chronicle, as far as it was written by Berthold, comprises a concise and impartial history of the troublesome times immediately preceding the acces- sion of Gregory VII and probably also of the early reign of this great pontiff. It is reprinted to the year 1080, with an introduction by Pertz, in "Mon. Germ. Hist.: Script." V, 264–326, and in P. L., CXLVII, 314–442. Pertz contends that Berthold did not begin the continuation of Hermann's chronicle until 1076, and that in the execution of it he made use of another chronicle, written by Bernold who was also a monk of Reichenau; but it has been proved almost beyond doubt by Giesebrecht and Schulzen that Berthold was the first to conlinuc Hermann's chronicle and that Bernold's chronicle is a continuation of Berthold's. It is, however, still undecided as to what year Berthold's chronicle extends. Ussermann and Schulzcn hold that it extends only to the year 1066, while Pertz, Giesebrecht, and others believe that Berthold wrote the chronicle at least to the middle of the year 1080, where the manuscript suddenly ceases in the middle of a sentence.
The original text of Berthold is no longer in ex-