St. Wendel Church
Building, structure
Although the small village, which was settled near the confluence of the Garam River into the Danube, was mentioned in written sources as early as the 12th century, throughout history, probably mainly due to its small population, it did not have an independent parish. ; The predecessor of the present Baroque-style St. Wendel Church was a chapel built around 1755. (According to tradition, the remains of an even earlier church were used for this building.) The chapel was then expanded in 1791 into the church that still stands today. ; The only entrance to the single-nave, oriental, Baroque-style church building opens on the western facade. Both its gates and windows are stone-framed. A Baroque attic rises above the entrance. The church's small bell tower is a wooden, pyramid-shaped tower protruding from the ridge of the roof. The church's organ was recently renovated.