One of the oldest preserved churches in Lower Silesia - mentioned in 1233, erected in the second half of the 19th century. 13th century. In the years 1378-1388, the builder Szymon erected a new presbytery covered with a vault by master Klaus Parler. In 1623, the roof and vaults of the church were destroyed, which were restored in 1645. In 1670, the church was thoroughly rebuilt, and the western part was added around 1830. Currently, it is an oriented brick building, founded on a rectangular plan , with a separated presbytery ended polygonal. The three-bay presbytery is covered with a net vault, and the three-nave, six-bay nave with a basilica layout has a barrel vault in the main nave and cross vaults in the side naves. Its outer walls are the remains of a late-Romanesque building from the turn of the 12th and 13th centuries. It was a three-nave brick basilica, closed from the east with three apses, covered with a wooden ceiling. Neunhertz "The Last Supper". Sculptures of St. Andrew and St. Hedwig. Baroque side altars of the Holy Family and St. Anna, a pulpit from 1677, a classicist baptismal font from 1845, two Gothic sculptures of the Madonna and Child from the 14th and 15th centuries, and St. Hedwig from the 15th century. Gothic Renaissance details of stonework (portal from 1579). Next to the church, there is a Gothic belfry from the mid-14th century, originally the tower of the city gate. Next to the belfry, a baroque figure of St. John of Nepomuk (1728)