The village church of Deersheim-Bexheim is a characteristic late Romanesque complex.
The church building consists of a mighty square west tower, a rectangular nave of equal width, a somewhat recessed choir and a semicircular apse.
It was probably built around 1170 from hewn field stones and consecrated by the Halberstadt Bishop Ulrich.
Only a few small arched windows open the fortified tower and the nave.
The church tower had deep cracks, and in 2010 it was "secured" with a wire mesh to prevent stones falling out into a neighboring kindergarten.
The German Foundation for Monument Protection got involved, and the church tower has been renovated since the end of 2012.
The winged altar from the end of the 15th century, which rises above a stone cafeteria, deserves a special mention in the flat-roofed interior.
The oldest piece of equipment is the Romanesque sandstone font.
(Source: Wikipedia)