In 1420 the castle was again wrecked during the Bavarian War by troops of Duke Louis of Ingolstadt.
However, when the village of Thuisbrunn was destroyed in July 1449 by Nuremberg soldiers and again in 1460 during the Princes' War, the castle remained undamaged.
During the Thirty Years' War and thereafter, Thuisbrunn and the castle were plundered seven times by Imperial, Swedish and Bavarian soldiers.
In 1816, the cartographer, Johann Christoph Stierlein, made for the first time a very precise map of the castle area and its surviving buildings.
Towards the end of the Second World War the castle was shelled by American troops.