Parish Church dedicated to San Antón– Built in the mid-16th century, it is a single nave with a tower of two bodies topped by a wrought iron weathervane from the XVIII century. On its cover there is a modern tile of the Virgen del Carmen. It possesses altarpieces of very careful polychromy and perfect conservation and coffered of Mudejar tradition.
The church was built between 1546 and 1551 by the bricklayer Pablo Fernandez and the carpenter Juan Fernandez, later the Moors sacked it.
It is a single nave without a differentiated major chapel, covered with an armor of moam files with seven paired straps and apeinazados with loop of eight and simple squares on canes of acanthus. The musk has a loop of eight in the center and in the capes is combined with aspillas, coinciding this apeinazamiento with a replica in the starts of the pairs.
The main altarpiece was designed by Ambrosio de Vico and made, perhaps by Miguel Cano, around 1600-1603. It consists of bench and two floors with three streets. The bank presents the shield of the archbishop Pedro de Castro and, in the middle, an octagonal tabernacle, the only one preserved in its series, with a cartela on the door and topped with a demonstrator. The paintings of the five encasamientos are oils on table with passages of the life of San Benito and in the central superior the Calvario (school of Pedro de Raxis). In the niche there is an Immaculate of canesco type, added later. To the right and left of the atrium in two circular medallions is the shield of the archbishop Pedro de Castro.