Parroquia de Nuestra Señora de la Asunción
The church was constructed between 1565 and 1576. The building responds to the premises of the Vandelvira School, with a centralised plan, ribbed vaults and flat front which is accessed through a main arch. Its architect introduced mannerist compositional elements, especially on the covers, with an initial Renaissance design.
The interior space is divided into three naves, divided in turn into two sections, by means of cylindrical column pillars of the Doric-Tuscan order raised on a square base and a flat presbytery integrated into the central nave. Towards the exterior, three facades are presented. The main one, made of stonework and framed by large buttresses, consists of a semicircular arch, Tuscan columns and a plain pediment. The other cover maintains the same scheme, but simpler. The bell tower is attached to the third façade, square in shape and exhibiting the coat of arms of the Bishop Sancho Dávila. It was restored in the mid-twentieth century. Declared an Asset of Cultural Interest in 2009.