The church was built in the Middle Ages. In the northern part of the city of Hune, opposite the dune landscape, is the church, which was consecrated to Our Lady (Vor Frue Kirke) in the Middle Ages. It consists of a Romanesque apse, choir and nave with two late Gothic additions, a tower at the western end of the nave and a veranda next to the south door. The original part of the building, the apse, the choir and the nave, were built from blocks of granite on a plinth with a sloping edge, although there is a double plinth on the apse, the upper part of which is profiled. The rectangular north door was bricked up later than 1642, and the south door is still in use. On the north side of the choir and nave there are traces of the original arched windows, and in the north wall of the choir there is a small, deep-seated, now walled opening, perhaps one of the so-called leprosy windows, through which the sick could attend Mass without to expose the community.