The temple erected on the site of the old cemetery approx. 1220. belongs to the oldest and most valuable Late Romanesque buildings in this part of the country. The dispersed, partially lost ensemble of architectural details suggests that the building is a work of the workshop associated with the patronage of Henry the Bearded and his wife Jadwiga. oday, we can only admire the remains of the former parish church complex with its surrounding cemetery, including the defensive wall with arrow slits, a gate, and an entrance gate, a tower with a Renaissance portal, and Romanesque details in the surviving stonemasonry fragments: bases and column capitals. The temple once had a two-bay nave and a chancel, originally covered with ribbed vaulting, later replaced by a net vault. It was adapted for defensive purposes.
Fragments of stonework have survived in the form of stone pillars with capitals and bases, as well as a portion of the southwest wall with windows. Near the ruins, you can also see a tower crowned with a spire, at the base of which there is a stone, semicircular portal with Renaissance features.
The gate to the cemetery area is open all the time, and the church tower is open for visitors.






