During the 1860s, the old mediaeval church was demolished and in 1867 a new one was built.
The present church was built in 1796 on the site of an older mediaeval church.
The village is dominated by the mediaeval former church of St. Andrew.
A large, red brick building, it was built on the site of a mediaeval church which collapsed in the mid-18th century.
The original, mediaeval church was similar in plan to the surviving Saint Mary's.
Near the summit of the pass is a mediaeval church and three refuge huts.
The mediaeval church has Saxon origins with portions being built in the 13th, 14th and 15th centuries.
Unusually for large mediaeval churches in a small town, they are located only about five hundred feet apart.
The town is known for its mediaeval churches and towers.
The simultaneum thereby came to an end, and the mediaeval church once more served only the Protestants.