Hammarlunda Church

[2] Under the base of the tower, the graves of a man in his fifties, a woman and a child were found during a renovation in 1965.

[3] The church is Romanesque in style,[1] and largely unchanged since the Middle Ages.

[1] The church has two chalices, one carved from oak wood and one made of silver and donated to the church in 1820 by Jacob De la Gardie, owner of nearby Löberöd Castle.

The church has two bells, made in 1898 and 1924 respectively but replacing two older church bells, one of which is today on display at the Lund University Historical Museum in Lund.

[3] Before the Reformation, the church was dedicated to Saint Anne and a local pilgrimage site.