The church was built at the beginning of the 17th century on the site of a 16th-century wooden St. Anne’s chapel. The consecration of the church was held in 1613.
The church was built at the beginning of the 17th century on the site of a 16th-century wooden St. Anne’s chapel. The consecration of the church was held in 1613. The church is a prime example of the Lublin Renaissance. It is a small, slender, single-nave building without towers and with a chancel ending in a semicircular apse. The ornamental triangular gables are adorned with pinnacles. The barrel vault is covered with stuccos creating geometrical patterns filled with low reliefs. Precious early 17th-century polychrome has been preserved in the rooms above the vestry. The central point of the impressive manneristic high altar is a 17th-century painting of St. Anne with the Virgin and Child by the Lublin artist Stanisław Szczerbic. In the vicinity of the church there is a building of a former church hospital and a 17th-century brick presbytery located on the other side of the road.