The original building is documented since 1275 and was renovated in its present form in the sixteenth century; it is circumscribed by a wall that once contained the village cemetery.
In the nineteenth century the interior of the church was the subject of an important restoration completed in 1895: the hall was completely plastered and a neoclassical architectural apparatus was applied, consisting of a false ceiling with simple frames and the positioning of semicircular pilasters on the walls.
The 1976 Friuli earthquakes destroyed these architectural finishes, bringing to light the sixteenth-century layer of plaster, the frescoed crosses of the consecration and an interesting fresco, which dominates the triumphal arch, which depicts the Madonna and Child between two saints.