EGLISE SAINT-PIERRE
The church of Saint-Pierre is mentioned in texts from the 13th century and has the characteristics of a Romanesque building. It was almost completely rebuilt during the 19th century. Of the original building, only the apse remains. A stone of its facing in large granite unit bears the date 1306. On the west side, the façade is occupied by a two-storey wall-belfry, composed of two bays topped by a bell tower and a pinnacle.
The external buttresses, in medium granite, reveal the three bays of the nave. The church is characterised by its two levels of semi-circular openings and ends in the east with a pentagonal apse.
Inside, the semicircular apse has arcatures falling on columns with capitals decorated with figures and foliage. The building also had side chapels added at the end of the 15th century. In 1840, the nave of the building was redesigned, with each bay separated by Doric columns.