The church is a small rectangular hall church with a gable roof; the enclosing walls date from 1495, the wide arched windows, the low extension on the west side and the roof truss with octagonal slated roof turret and hood as well as the furnishings from the 18th century, the small vestibule on the south side probably from a renovation in 1735/36. Restorations took place in the years 1888/89; in 1901 a decoration with rose motifs and Art Nouveau ornaments was carried out, in 1960 a restoration of the room setting of the late 18th century. When the roof turret was re-roofed in 1969, the color of the interior had to be partially renewed due to the ingress of rainwater. In 1990 the church windows, in 1994 the clock tower and in 1999 the slate covering of the roof turret were restored or renewed. [1]
The interior has a flat ceiling and is structured by plastered mirrors and round fields; the room is surrounded by single-storey, marbled wooden galleries; the gallery fields were painted with biblical stories in the 17th century, which apart from the depiction of Pauli's conversion have not survived.
Source: Wikipedia