The first mention of a wooden church dates back to 1323. The preserved temple is dated to the 14th century. It was renovated and modernized many times, including in 1619, 1651, 1889, 1932 and in the 1990s. During the Reformation until 1668, the church was used by Lutherans. The church is located in the center of the village, by a local road. Surrounded by a stone wall with a plastered gate with a semicircularly closed passage, covered with a small gable roof. Oriented building. The church was built in the Gothic style. The building is made of field and broken stone, founded on a rectangular plan with a narrower, triangularly closed presbytery, a sacristy on a rectangular plan to the north and a tower on a square plan to the west. The body is varied in height, from the highest tower to the lowest sacristy. The nave and sacristy are covered with gable roofs, the presbytery has a gable roof that changes into a tented roof, and the tower, reinforced with two buttresses, is covered with a tented roof topped with a pyramidal spire. The nave roof was lowered in the 17th century, as evidenced by traces on the eastern wall. The roofing is made of contemporary ceramic and sheet metal roof tiles. The elevations are unplastered, pierced with window and door openings, mostly closed with pointed arches, with brick, plastered frames. There is a wooden ceiling above the single-nave interior. Of the original furnishings, 17th and 18th century paintings and Renaissance and Baroque epitaphs have been preserved, as well as stained glass windows from the beginning of the 20th century.