The church of St. Anthony Abbot, built on the hill of the same name, inhabited continuously since the Nuragic period, is mentioned in the Respuestas of 1777. The facade is flat, with a gabled crowning, broken at the top by the setting of the single-arched bell gable. On the canopy of the bell tower is a stone cross. On axis with the belfry are the small rose window and the entrance portal, made of squared and dressed stones and surmounted by a pointed archway, which is set on molded capitals, while the opening remains rectangular. The floor plan is single-nave, with the presbytery area raised on three steps, lit by the small rose window and some side windows. Outside, on the right flank, there is a small relief niche, obliterated and possibly intended to hold a statuette. The building, subject to “religious” use limited to the celebration of St. Anthony, was used as a hospital in the early 1900s, then as a home for a homeless family during World War II, and finally as an elementary school classroom during the 1950s.