It stands in the immediate vicinity of the Reformed Church. The small community of the Catholic religion did not have a church in the village from the 17th century onwards, so its members were forced to go to neighbouring villages to worship. It was only in the 19th century that Rafael Ghyczy built a small church in the neoclassical style. It was connected to the castle by a small corridor, where the Catholic priest lived. The church has been rebuilt several times, but the most recent remodelling has radically changed its exterior and interior. The straight-arched sanctuary with its original segmental arch, the stone entrance portal, the corner wall bands dividing the main façade, the connecting corridor and the original church interior have been removed. Between 1989 and 1993 a church with a nearly new wooden roof was built. All that remains is the original tower, covered with a pointed hipped roof, the tombs of the Ghyczycs and the organ from the first half of the 19th century in the elbow section of the choir loft. The archway of the former gateway to the castle, which dates from the second half of the 18th century, and the coat of arms of Amade Tádé and his wife, Angéla Nyáry, are set into the main church nave. In the tower are two bells cast by the firm Dosztál from Komárno in 1926. The interior of the church is modern, as the old altar has been replaced. The first mass was celebrated in the autumn of 1994.
Galéria