In the beginning it was the external chapel of the parish church of Fontanelle. The primitive church dated back to the early Middle Ages: perhaps in the 20th century it was already built. The first reliable document that mentions its name is from 1124, the period in which the Counts of Camino donated "the villa" of Visnà to the district of Conegliano. At that time however, ecclesiastically it was under the jurisdiction of the Abbey of Lovadina: in 1490. It passed to the monastery of the Augustinians of S. Maria degli Angeli in Murano until 1810, the year in which the church of Visnà passed to the direct dependencies of the bishop of Ceneda. Since 1426 it had been a curacy. Bishop Michele Cardinal Dalla Torre erected it as a Parish on 2 October 1576. The first church was demolished in 1628 to build a new one that was completed in 1635; the latter was destroyed during the war of 1915-18. The current church was built according to the design of the architect Antonio Varlonga of Moriago. Bishop E. Beccegato consecrated it on 10 November 1925. After the First World War, the old bell tower that had served the first two churches was also rebuilt. Among the various works of art, we remember the choir stalls carved and sculpted in bas-relief by Antonio Pigatti and his son Giovanni from Colle Umberto, in 1711.