- The church of Our Lady of Courgis was built in the thirteenth century. The edifice consists of two naves ending in a right chevet above the high altar. The main nave consists of four spans and features two-rowed pillars of the leaves, ogival arches and ribbed vaults. The portal of the thirteenth century is worthy of interest: the columns with capitals are bevelled and the tympanum carries a cross struck in a 14th century lanceolate ogive, framed by a trilobal arcade with sausages. His mural paintings date from the first half of the sixteenth century.
- Remarkable elements of the furniture:
- The reliquary containing the Sainte Epine and dating from 1559.
- The pulpit and the high altar in painted wood from the 18th century. A lectern in wood and wrought iron, and a wrought iron gate of the eighteenth also.
- The painted wood procession sticks date from the 18th century. They represent Saint Roch, Saint Anne and the Virgin, Holy Queen of Alise, the Blessed Sacrament, a Holy Bishop, may be Saint Eloi, and the Assumption of the Virgin. These sticks were used in processions and pilgrimages.