In the middle of the large village of Satrup, near the main intersection, on a green area, the former cemetery, stands the Romanesque church, built around 1200, with a rectangular nave and a narrower box choir. The access route leads through a cemetery gate made of brick in 1766.
The church was perhaps originally planned as a granite block construction. With the elaborate cuboid technology, however, you could not get beyond the beautifully profiled base, beyond that you only led up the corners in cuboids and used field stones for the surfaces. The narrow Romanesque arched windows are still preserved on the north and east sides; the large segment arch windows on the south side were added in the late Middle Ages.
In front of the Romanesque north portal, a late Gothic porch made of brick with a paneled gable was built in the 15th century. The brick and granite tower was built in 1903 based on a design by the Schleswig building councilor Kosidowski. It replaced one of the freestanding wooden towers typical of fishing. Next to the tower portal, the "Satrup Horseman", which was walled up in the vestibule until 1903, found its present-day location. On the picture cube, probably created for the Romanesque church, a rider with a helmet, shield and waving coat, swinging a lance, is probably a symbol of the fight against evil