Every year several tourists visit the church and the little village of less than a hundred inhabitants in one of the side valleys of River Zala.
The inhabitants of the village were forced to leave the church by reason of the Turkish expansion in the 17th century.
The Romanesque church has brick walls on its stone base and a conical roof structure.
The ancient round base, the entablature, the apse and the cupola all refer to Romanesque architecture in the middle of the 13th century.
The nearly 800-year-old church in the cemetery hosts the summer concerts in July and August.