The Crown, which enjoyed clerical appointment rights since before the Reformation, sold the church in 1767 to the parish priest, Christian Henrik Biering.
In 1810, Peter Hersleb Classen, director of Det Classenske Fideicommis, transferred the church's ownership to the local landowners and in 1919 it became autonomous.
The tower with stepped gables, built in the Gothic period, fills the full width of the nave.
The pulpit carved in the auricular style by Jørgen Ringnis (1645) is similar to those in Toreby and Væggerløse.
[3] Notable burials at the associated graveyard include former principal of Classen's Agrivultural School Albert la Cour[4] and agriculturalist Adolph Lacoppidan.