
Bernard was named Secretary of the Council of Troyes in 1128. At the Council St. Bernard outlined the Rule of the Knights Templar which resulted in Pope Innocent II accepting ‘The Poor Knights of Christ and the Temple of Solomon’ (The Knights Templar) into the Catholic fold, who then soon became the ideal of Cristian nobility. St. Bernard guided a noviciate named BERNARDO PAGANELLI DI MONTEMAGNO (Eugnius III) under his wing, played a major role in "breeding" or prepping him, and making it possible for him to become pope in 1145. From thenceforward, Bernard was extremely influential in almost every decision which was made in Rome.
St Bernard wrote the first ‘rules’ of the Templar Order which were based, almost entirely, on the Order adopted by the Cistercians, and this shows in all likelihood that Bernard had undertaken this task personally. "The Templars were officially declared to be a monastic order under the protection of Church in Troyes in 1139. Bernard went further and insisted that Pope Innocent II recognised this infant order as being solely under the authority of the Pope and no other temporal or ecclesiastical authority. It is a fact that the Templars venerated St Bernard from that moment on, until their own demise in 1307." (ibid)
"St Bernard travelled extensively, negotiated in civil disturbances and, surprisingly for the period, was instrumental in preventing a number of pogroms taking place against Jews in various locations within what is present day France. A staunch supporter of an Augustinian view of the mystery of the Christian faith, St Bernard was fiercely opposed to ‘rationalistic’ views of Christianity. In particular he was a staunch opponent of the dialectician ‘Peter Abelard’, a man whom St Bernard virtually destroyed when Abelard refused to accept Bernard’s own criticism of his radical ideas." (ibid)
"St Bernard died in Clairvaux on August 20th 1153, a date that would soon become his feast day, for St Bernard was canonised within a few short years of his death." (ibid)
I will post additional information on The Knights Templar in the near future.
St. Bernard of of Clairvaux, article by Alan Butler
http://blog.templarhistory.com/2010/03/bernard-of-clairvaux/
wikipeida article