Set above the village (first documented in 1219), it has a Romanesque bell tower on the north side and two 18th-century painted sundials (one with an allegory of death). Inside, the nave with painted coffered ceiling (late 17th century), choir with rich late-Baroque stucco decorations and three Rococo altars are worthy of note. On one wall of the nave there is a 15th-century preparatory sketch of Saint George and the dragon.