The parish church Beata Vergine Assunta dates back to the last quarter of the 16th century, but it was not until 1599 that it became the parish church. Corroborating the late 16th-century construction is the dating of one of the two bells in the bell gable bearing the year 1585. The presence of the coats of arms of the Aragall and Bellit families in the church testifies that the village was under Catalan-Aragonese control.
The structure has a Latin cross plan; it consists of a nave with two side chapels and a double-pitched roof. The central core was built in the ne 1500s. In the chapel, on the right side we find, of considerable artistic value, the wooden Christ, known as the “Sorrowful Crucifix,” of the Sardinian school with Iberian-Campanian influences, dated between the late 16th and early 17th centuries. In World War II it was placed to the right of the entrance portal, then removed and placed on top of a catafalque. After the war and for about sixty years, traces of it were lost, probably due to displacement.