The so-called
Hunfried document of 1044 AD mentions among others a witness named
Lütold von Affoltern who is suspected as the builder of the castle.
Lütold I von Regensberg was mentioned in 1088 on occasion of a war against the Abbot of St. Gallen, and the next inhabitants of the castle may have been
Lütold II, his wife
Judenta and their son
Lütold III who donated lands to build a nunnery, the
Fahr Abbey in 1130. Another inhabitant of the castle,
Lütold IV, along with the
House of Rapperswil, became the founder of the
Rüti Abbey in 1206. A visible sign of the upturn of the
House of Regensberg was the decisive transformation of the castle as high medieval aristocratic residence with circular walls made of stone instead of palisades, and the elaborate shell of the keep. After the construction of
Neu-Regensberg by
Lütold V, in 1255 an inheritance occurred:
Lütold VI retained the ancestral castle and the extensive free float, his brother
Ulrich received
Neu-Regensberg and the possessions in the
Limmattal. In the second half of the 13th century many pledges and sales are documented, and after the so-called
Regensberg feud (
Regensberger Fehde) in 1267/68 the family declined: The city of Zürich and
Rudolf von Habsburg who later became king should have destroyed respectively conquered with adventurous lists the surrounding Regensberg castles. Around 1290
Lütold VII had already left his home castle, but maybe up to his death in 1320 he settled again on Alt-Regensberg. The last representative of
Neu-Regensberg returned to the ancestral castle, after they had sold the castle and town of
Neu-Regensberg in 1302. On 2 September 1407
Uolrich von Landenberg von Griffense der Älteste and his son
Walther confirmed the conditions to sell the castle, rights and lands to the city of Zürich. The decline in importance of the castle had been shown already in the Old Zürich War, when Zürich's opponent Alt-Regensberg occupied without resistance.
Martin von Landenberg-Greifensee died in 1442, whereupon his daughter Martha inherited the castle. After she married Johann Schwend, a citizen of Zürich, With great effort, he re-designed especially the interior of the castle. In his report Mötteli wrote to have installed six heatable rooms that he had provided with belt floors and wood paneling, glass windows, stove tiles, a new oven and a deeper cellar. Ten years later, Luzern whose citizen Mötteli became, supported the claims of the city of Zürich on Alt-Regensberg. Therefore, the castle came with what was left of the former rights and lands to the city of Zürich and became part of the
Herrschaft Regensberg, but the castle itself disintegrated. The ruins henceforth had to serve as a quarry: in 1705 to build the church of Regensdorf and in 1775 for the construction of the bridge of Adlikon. Yet in 1897 a complete demolition of the ruins was planned, but in 1902 and 1909 first backup masonry work were done. Nevertheless, in 1919 the castle area was rebuilt into a water reservoir for the hamlet of Altburg. As a result of the extensive archaeological investigations in 1955/57, the area was excavated and conserved, and since the 1980s, the Canton of Zürich repeatedly executed wall coatings to preserve the most important castle in the Zürich
Unterland from further decay. Today, the site of the castle, but not the castle's hill, are the property of the Canton of Zürich. == House of Regensberg ==