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Located in the district of San Gervasio, a village of a few houses distributed along a short ribbon of road, it was almost certainly erected in the thirteenth century and dedicated to the Saints Gervasio and Protasio.
It was an integral part of a convent of the Benedictine Fathers, but today it is detached from the latter which in the meantime has been decommissioned and become privately owned. Currently it is presented in the guise assumed after the reconstruction of the sixteenth century and restored towards the end of the seventeenth. More recently it was restored in 1950 and then in 2005, due to the will of the locals.
It has a beautiful façade with horizontal crowning distinguished by a portal framed in rounded bricks, two square side windows and, at the top, a large window. The small sailing bell tower is on the right and holds a bell. The interior is a single hall and preserves some sacred relics that are exhibited to the faithful on June 19, the day of the festivities in honor of San Gervasio.