Background
Manegold, the youngest son of Count Diepold of Berg in Upper Swabia and of Gisela of Andechs, was destined for a religious career.
Manegold, the youngest son of Count Diepold of Berg in Upper Swabia and of Gisela of Andechs, was destined for a religious career.
At the same time he was also given the management of the Austrian monastery of Kremsmünster, which he kept from 1183 to 1206, although not without opposition. He then became abbot of the Bavarian monastery of Tegernsee between 1190 and 1206, and gave up the abbacy of Saint George"s in 1193 or 1194. In 1197 he took part in the Crusade to the Holy Land.
He was elected Bishop of Passau in 1206, which he remained until 1215.
Against the background of the pro-Hohenstaufen attitude of the Counts of Berg, Manegold was much involved in the political activities of the Holy Roman Empire and met with Emperor Henry VI (1190–1197), King Philip of Swabia (1198–1208), Emperor Otto IV (1198–1215/1218) and Emperor Frederick II (1212/1215–1250). As a bishop he was interested in the territorial expansion of his bishopric, and had the city of Passau fortified in 1209.
He died on 9 June 1215 in Vienna.
He became a monk in his youth, then abbot of the monastery of Saint George"s Abbey in the Black Forest, where he defended its property rights in the Tennenbach estate conflict (1180–1187).