Counts of Toggenburg The members of the Toggenburg family were buried in the so-called
Toggenburger Gruft, a
burial vault where is as of today the entrance hall to the church. On 23 April 1398 Count Donat von Toggenburg, Herr zu Brettengow und Tavas donated the church of
Elsow as benefice for the new
Allerheiligenaltar at the grave of the Toggenburg family, for the "salvation of his daughter soul Menta von Toggenburg" who died shortly before, as well as further lands and goods in the present
Weinland district of the canton of Zürich, confirmed among others by Ruodolf von Bonstetten from
Ustra on 23 April 1398. Count Fridrich von Toggenburg, Herr zu Brettengow und Tafas donated to "his own and the salvation of his ancestors who were buried" (at the Rüti church) "and where he also expects to be buried", the church, rights and lands (
Kirchwidem and
Kirchensatz) in
Wangen in der March to the
Rüti Monastery, sealed by Fridrich and the knights
Herman von Landenberg,
Johans von Bonstetten from
Ustra and
Herman von der Hochenlandenberg on 21 January 1407. In 1436 Count
Friedrich VII of Toggenburg died and was buried probably in 1439 in a chapel, the so-called
Toggenburger Kapelle (
capella nova in latere monasterii de novo construxit) given by his noble wife, Countess
Elisabeth von Toggenburg, née
von Mätsch.
Elisabeth Countess of Toggenburg spent her last days in the Rüti Abbey, and she was mentioned on 20 June 1442 that she was retreated there ("unser wesen gentzlich in dasselbe gotzhus got zuo dienende gezogen haben") and elected her tomb to be with her husband after her death. On 11 June 1443 marauding troops of the Old Swiss Confederacy devastated the monastery and desecrated the bodies of the nobles, including Count Friedrich VII who they held responsible for the
war with Zürich, and the scavengers
pelted with the remains like schoolboys with snowballs.
Burials of other noble families On 29 November 1389, seven months after the
Battle of Näfels, the abbot
Bilgeri von Wagenberg moved about 100 bodies respectively the bones of the Swiss-Austrian knights and soldiers, among them his brother
Johann von Klingenberg, from the battle field. The Rüti abbey's abbot reburied their remains in a mass grave within the choir of the church, where they were discovered on occasion of the archaeological excavations in 1980. In addition, there was a large number of members of noble families and knights living nearby, although there were never found burials of the founders of the abbey, the
House of Regensberg. Most of the burials respectively ledger stones are lost or destroyed – particularly the ones of the Toggenburg family and those of the nobilities that were deconsecrated by the Old Swiss Confederacy troops in June 1443 – or were re-used for buildings etc. The devastation and the plundering weakened the monastic manorial, and the desecration of the graves diminished the importance of the abbey as preferred burial place of the nobility. But, memoria for the noble families remain largely intact, even after the
Reformation in Zürich until the demolition of the
Toggenburgerkapelle vault when the church partially had to rebuild in 1770. Among other burials in the Rüti church, there are the families of the
Amtsmann, the representatives of the government of the city of Zürich who resided in Rüti between 1525 and 1789. == Cultural heritage of national importance ==