| The church was built in the first half of the twelfth in the vicinity of a settlement of the Templars, and perhaps belonged to them until 1312. It has a rectangular plan divided into three aisles without transept, and has a porch with columns in front. The main portal has a bezel that depicts moments of the Annunciation.
Inside, the nave is covered by the lateral beams and have vaults. Inside it houses a painting on wood of the Madonna and Child, attributed to the painter Neo-Byzantine Rico de Candia (XVI century). In this church took the oath of the Norman knights leaving for the Crusades.
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