Once a possession of the Empire, this church was donated by Emperor Henry VI in exchange for the appointment of a Prémontré as parish priest. It underwent major changes during restoration work in the early 20th century: a door was added to the west façade, cross vaults replaced the longitudinal barrel vault of the chapel and the floor level of the choir was lowered. The roundness of the three projections that make up the base of the church give it its distinctive character. The architecture of the tower stands out from the rest of the building and suggests that it was built towards the end of the 12th century. The chronology of this church is complex: it is possible to identify a first construction in the first half of the 12th century with the choir and the pilaster entrance to the north chapel, and a second construction with the tower in particular, around 1180-1190.