It was closed in 1556 during the Protestant Reformation, and later was administered by Jesuits and then the Knights of Malta before being auctioned in 1817 and largely demolished.
[3] Bishop Otto of Bamberg rebuilt the monastery and in 1131 repopulated it with Benedictine monks from the Prüfening Abbey near Regensburg.
[3] The complex was largely demolished, and the stones were used to build new houses, including the nearby Gasthof Rauscher.
In 1819 the city magistrate of Landshut bought archivolts and walls, which were integrated into construction of the cemetery portal, complete in 1820.
The layout is known from a view of the monastery by Michael Wening published in the first volume of his Historico - Topographica Descriptio von Ober- und Niederbayern (1701).
Findings included the foundations of a church with a recessed rectangular choir dating from the 10th or 11th century, before the Romanesque period, and traces of later buildings.
This covered an area of 2,500 square metres (27,000 sq ft), the largest monastery excavation in Bavaria.
In 1500 building began in the eastern part of the site, where there are numerous remains including a cellar and many other structures from the redesigned monastery.