The church of Carmine, which originated in the 14th century, has late Romanesque forms that are already influenced by Gothic. The facade, facing west, has the first order divided by two ribs with three ribs each, which flank the Romanesque portal. The architrave is supported by two carved capitals, located on the jambs, decorated with denticulated motifs and small concentric rings: the one on the left still retains a carved head in half relief. On the architrave discharges a Romanesque arch circumscribed by a carved cornice, which in turn rests on two decorated hanging brackets. This lower part is bordered, upward, by a frieze of five Gothic trilobate arches on each side, with a carved ovolo cornice, interrupted in the middle by a fine mullioned window also Gothic. To the left of the mullioned window is a sculpture with three figures, recalling the flight of the Holy Family to Egypt. The apse and the rear part of the church have trefoil arches. Other important friezes recall the antiquity of the structure.